Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
International

Sikh-American Teenage Author Forced To Remove His Turban At US Airport

Darpan News Desk IANS, 20 Apr, 2016 09:53 AM
  • Sikh-American Teenage Author Forced To Remove His Turban At US Airport
A Sikh-American teenager who authored a book about bullying that the community faces in the US was forced to remove his turban at the Meadows Field Airport in Bakersfield, California, a media report has said.
 
Karanveer Singh Pannu was heading for the annual Sikh Youth Symposium - a public speaking competition held in Bakersfield but was forced to remove his turban by Transportation Security Administration (TSA) personnel, NBC News reported this week.
 
"I had gone to talk about my book as an inspirational speaker to address all the kids participating in the annual Sikh Youth Symposium," Pannu was quoted as saying. 
 
According to him, after going through the metal detector at the airport, he was asked to do a self-pat down of his turban and a chemical swab test for explosive material. 
 
 
After a positive swab test, he was taken to a secondary screening room to be given a full pat down and was asked to remove his turban to be further scanned, the report added.
 
"I refused at first but when they threatened me that I could not fly, I agreed, provided they gave me a mirror to retie my turban," said Pannu who wrote the book titled "Bullying of Sikh American Children: Through the Eyes of a Sikh American High School Student." 
 
"Before I removed my turban, Agent Hernandez asked the dreaded asinine question, 'Is there anything we need to be aware of before you remove your turban?' I politely answered that there is a lot of long hair and something called the brain underneath," he was quoted as saying in the report.
 
 
Meanwhile, the TSA declined to comment on the specifics of any individual passenger's screening experience.
 
They said officers offer a private room whenever additional screening requires the removal of religious apparel.
 
Pannu, however, said he felt "utterly humiliated, shaken, distraught" by the experience.
 
In 2007, the TSA revised its screening procedures for head coverings based on discussions with the Sikh community.

MORE International ARTICLES

Indian Lawyer Abhinav Bhushan Named South Asia Regional Director At International Arbitration Court

Indian Lawyer Abhinav Bhushan Named South Asia Regional Director At International Arbitration Court
The first Indian to be appointed as deputy counsel of the ICC earlier, Bhushan “will be based in its Asia offices in Singapore and will take on part of the role of the outgoing regional director, Sylvia Tee”

Indian Lawyer Abhinav Bhushan Named South Asia Regional Director At International Arbitration Court

Four Indian Americans Selected To US National Academy Of Engineering

Four Indian Americans Selected To US National Academy Of Engineering
Four Indian American engineers are among 80 new members selected to the prestigious US National Academy of Engineering (NAE) for their valuable contributions to the society.

Four Indian Americans Selected To US National Academy Of Engineering

Nuns Who Help Homeless Face Eviction In Costly San Francisco

Nuns Who Help Homeless Face Eviction In Costly San Francisco
 Sister Mary Benedicte wants to focus on feeding the hungry lined up outside a soup kitchen in a gritty part of San Francisco.

Nuns Who Help Homeless Face Eviction In Costly San Francisco

Analysts Pan Canada's Plan To Arm Kurdish Fighters In Northern Iraq

OTTAWA — The government is facing calls to reconsider a plan to arm Kurdish fighters with automatic weapons and mortars because they could fall into enemy hands or be used to harm innocent civilians.

Analysts Pan Canada's Plan To Arm Kurdish Fighters In Northern Iraq

Germany Train Crash: Train Collision Kills At Least 9, Injures Over 150

Germany Train Crash: Train Collision Kills At Least 9, Injures Over 150
TV footage showed emergency helicopters and ambulances lined up in an area near the crash scene waiting to transport the most severely injured to hospitals.

Germany Train Crash: Train Collision Kills At Least 9, Injures Over 150

Pakistan Court Accepts Plea To Bring Back Koh-i-noor From UK

Pakistan Court Accepts Plea To Bring Back Koh-i-noor From UK
The plea filed by Barrister Javed Iqbal Jaffry made Pakistan's claim over the 105-carat gem on the basis that it hailed from the territory that became Pakistan in 1947.

Pakistan Court Accepts Plea To Bring Back Koh-i-noor From UK