The Asian Age

Sikh- American barred from flight

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New York: Waris Ahluwalia, a Sikh- American actor, model and designer has been barred from

boarding a flight from Mexico City to New York

after he refused to remove his turban during a security check.

New York: Waris Ahluwalia, a Sikh- American actor, model and designer, was barred from boarding a flight from Mexico City to New York after he refused to remove his turban during a security check, drawing swift condemnati­on from the fashion community.

Ahluwalia, 41, based in Manhattan, said he checked in at Aeromexico airline’s counter at Mexico City’s internatio­nal airport about 5.30 am on Monday and was given his first- class boarding pass with code “SSSS” that he said meant that he needed secondary security screening. “This morning in Mexico City I was told I could not board my @ aeromexico flight to NYC because of my turban,” Ahluwalia, who appeared in the Oscarnomin­ated film The Grand Budapest Hotel and the US television series The Carrie Diaries, wrote on his Instagram account.

When Ahluwalia showed up at the gate to board Flight 408 to New York City, attendants told him he needed to step aside and wait for other passengers to board. His feet and bag were searched and swabbed. He was told to remove his sweatshirt and was patted down, the New York Times reported. Then, he said, he was asked to take

Waris Ahluwalia said he checked in at Aeromexico airline’s counter at Mexico City’s internatio­nal airport on Monday and was given his first- class boarding pass with code ‘ SSSS’ that he said meant that he needed secondary security screening

off his turban.

“I responded... That I won’t be taking off my turban,” he said in an interview from the airport in Mexico City. “And then they talked amongst themselves and they said, ‘ OK, then you are not getting on the flight.’”

Ahluwalia said he would not board a plane back to New York until the airline makes a public apology and airport security personnel get Sikh awareness training and better training on how to screen passengers with religious headwear. The incident drew swift condemnati­on on social media and from the head of the Council of Fashion Designers of America. Steven Kolb described the situation as “outrageous”.

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