Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
Health

New Airline Passenger Vetting Could Amount To Racial Profiling: Watchdog

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jan, 2016 11:58 AM
    OTTAWA — The federal border agency's new system for scrutinizing incoming air passengers could open the door to profiling based on race or other personal factors, warns Canada's privacy czar.
     
    Privacy Commissioner Daniel Therrien is pressing the Canada Border Services Agency to explain the program's rationale and build in safeguards to protect civil liberties.
     
    Canadian law requires commercial airlines to provide the border agency with specific information about passengers flying to Canada, including name, birthdate, citizenship, seat number and other data.
     
    For years the border agency has used the information to try to zero in on terrorists or other serious international criminals. Travellers are assessed for risk, allowing the agency to single out those with high-risk scores for closer examination at the airport.
     
    The border agency is moving to a system known as scenario-based targeting, already used by the United States, as part of Canada's commitment to work closely with Washington under a perimeter security pact forged in 2011.
     
    The border agency says the new scheme will be more efficient, effective and accurate, directing the focus to a smaller segment of the travelling population who represent a potential high risk.
     
    The new scenario-based method uses Big Data analytics — extensive number-crunching to identify patterns — to evaluate all data collected from air carriers, says Therrien's office, which reviewed the border agency's privacy impact assessment of the project.   
     
    "Designed to harmonize with the system used by the U.S., it could allow the operator to, for example, search for all males aged between the ages of 18-20 who are Egyptian nationals and who have visited both Paris and New York," Therrien says in his recently released annual report.
     
    The privacy commissioner is concerned travellers may now be targeted for increased scrutiny if they fit the general attributes of a group — "subjected to recurring and unnecessary attention at the border because of characteristics they cannot change," such as age, gender, nationality, birthplace, or racial or ethnic origin.
     
     
    Therrien's office recommended the border agency:
     
    — Demonstrate the necessity of scenario-based targeting, beyond the general purpose of aligning Canada's system with that of the U.S.;
     
    — Be more transparent by fleshing out the privacy impact assessment with general descriptions of the types of scenarios that might be used to identify potentially high-risk travellers;
     
    — Conduct regular reviews of the "effectiveness and proportionality of scenarios," including an examination of impacts on civil liberties and human rights;
     
    — Prepare a broader privacy assessment of the overall program used to collect passenger information from airlines.
     
    The border agency "responded positively" to all of the recommendations, Therrien's office says in the annual report.
     
    However, the commissioner has yet to receive the requested details about the program, said Valerie Lawton, a spokeswoman for Therrien.
     
    The border agency could not immediately provide information on the project's status or about efforts to comply with the commissioner's recommendations.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    'Cool' teenagers not so cool when they grow up

    'Cool' teenagers not so cool when they grow up
    Teenagers who tried to act "cool" in early adolescence are more likely to experience a range of problems in early adulthood than their peers who did not act "cool", a decade-long study shows.

    'Cool' teenagers not so cool when they grow up

    Don't hide truth from kids, they'll know it anyway

    Don't hide truth from kids, they'll know it anyway
    If you do not reveal the complete picture in front of your kids while explaining an event, the children not only know that you are hiding something, they are also likely to find out on their own the complete truth.

    Don't hide truth from kids, they'll know it anyway

    When male dolphin fell in love with female researcher

    When male dolphin fell in love with female researcher
    Can animals fall in love with humans? They do, but in the case of a female animal researcher the chemistry between her and a male dolphin was well beyond just love.

    When male dolphin fell in love with female researcher

    Why stress, fear trigger heart attacks

    Why stress, fear trigger heart attacks
    In a first, scientists have come up with an explanation to why a sudden shock, stress and fear may trigger heart attack and they found that multiple bacterial species living as biofilms on arterial walls could hold the key to such attacks.

    Why stress, fear trigger heart attacks

    When sperm bundle up to win fertility race

    When sperm bundle up to win fertility race
    It takes two to tango. But here, a bundle of sperm beat out other sperm in race to fertilisation!

    When sperm bundle up to win fertility race

    Human tongue has a sixth taste sense!

    Human tongue has a sixth taste sense!
    In addition to recognising sweet, sour, salty, savory (umami), and bitter tastes, your tongue has a sixth taste sense - the "sense of carbs" - that allows you to perceive carbohydrates -- the nutrients that break down into sugar and form the main source of energy.

    Human tongue has a sixth taste sense!