Man removed from UK flight over 'prayer' message on phone

Started by garbon, March 04, 2016, 06:41:51 AM

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crazy canuck

#165
Quote from: Peter Wiggin on April 18, 2016, 09:46:23 PM
Sure, once you divorce it from the context and alter the meaning it could be used that way.

Your argument is that a false positive is always better than a false negative when trying to find a terrorist.

But that kind of logic is how we get to a person who is clearly not a terrorist being removed from a flight despite all the evidence to the contrary.  It is the battle cry for those who excuse over reactions.  While it is undoubtedly better to always catch a terrorist, your simplistic formulation ignores the fact that there can be a whole range of options which reduces the chances of false positives and reduces the degree of inconvenience for those people who are the victims of false positives.

Eddie Teach

Quote from: crazy canuck on April 19, 2016, 09:10:28 AM
Your argument is that a false positive is always better than a false negative when trying to find a terrorist.

But that kind of logic is how we get to a person who is clearly not a terrorist being removed from a flight despite all the evidence to the contrary.  It is the battle cry for those who excuse over reactions.  While it is undoubtedly better to always catch a terrorist, your simplistic formulation ignores the fact that there can be a whole range of options which reduces the chances of false positives and reduces the degree of inconvenience for those people who are the victims of false positives.

That wasn't an argument at all. And strictly speaking, it's not my claim either. More like, a false positive is always better than a false negative when determining if someone can board a plane. There may even be edge cases where it's not true(guy denied passage turns to terrorism and plans an even bigger attack), but close enough to 100% to say it's categorically better.

It is not any kind of logic, it is a premise. If you take the additional premises that it's better for terrorists to be removed than not and that it's better for innocent passengers to be allowed to keep their seats than not, than yes, logically you'll remove more non-terrorists from flights. Likewise, if you make an alternate premise, such as that a false negative is better, or that the system should try to keep false negatives and false positives equal, logically it will result in fewer people being wrongly removed and more terrorists getting through.

Of course, the situation you're describing is one in which my premise is kept, but the premise that it is also better for innocent passengers to be allowed to keep their seats is ignored. Obviously, it's a balancing act.
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Razgovory

Quote from: Martinus on April 19, 2016, 01:43:16 AM
But that's not a comparable analogy - noone is arguing that people who speak Arabic should not be allowed on planes. Instead, we are arguing whether the airport staff have acted reasonably by wanting to check a man who was heard saying a popular terrorist catch phrase before allowing him back on a plane.

So, in your analogy, if a very thin gay man, with sunken eyes, and weird leshions applies to work at a hospital, it is not unreasonable for the hospital staff to first run some blood tests before letting him assist with surgery. And even after they have run such tests, it is not out of the realm of possibility that some patients may be alarmed without being homophobic.

I think has to do with far more with profiling then what one idiot thought  a person said.  I doubt they would mistake you or I saying that.  If we should take precautions with one group why not another?  A blood test for AIDS can't be done and processed every morning for a gay person.  The safest course would be to keep them out of the hospital all together, wouldn't it?
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garbon

So here's another one - at least they didn't have to miss their flight.

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/08/uk-muslims-ordered-plane-isil-accusation-160823134350659.html



QuoteUK: Muslims ordered off plane after ISIL accusation
Sisters and brother interrogated on London airport runway after fellow passengers claimed seeing Arabic text on phone.

Three British Muslim siblings were left traumatised after being escorted off a plane in London and interrogated on the tarmac as armed police kept watch, after fellow passengers accused them of being members of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) group.

Sakina Dharas, 24, her sister Maryam, 19, and their brother Ali, 21, were on board EasyJet flight EZY3249 from London's Stansted Airport to the Italian city of Naples on August 17.

Sakina told Al Jazeera on Tuesday that as the plane was about to take off, a crew member ordered the siblings off the aircraft and escorted them down the staircase to the tarmac, where they were met by armed police and an MI5 agent who questioned them for one hour.

Earlier, two passengers - also travelling to Naples - had told authorities that the siblings had been looking at a mobile phone screen that showed either Arabic text or the words "praise be to Allah", Sakina said.

"A passenger on your flight has claimed that you three are members of ISIS," the MI5 agent said to the siblings, according to Sakina, a clinical pharmacist.


"The minute that I saw police standing there, I was extremely emotional," she said.

"We had nothing at all [on our phones]. We don't even speak Arabic, we're [of] Indian [origin]."

Sakina added that her brother had not looked at his phone during their time at Stansted.

The only Arabic in her smartphone is within an app featuring verses from the Quran, she said, which "wasn't open" throughout their time in the airport.

During their one-hour interrogation on the tarmac, Sakina said she was asked to explain - page by page - the details of various entry stamps on her passport. She also showed the MI5 agent recent WhatsApp messages. The siblings provided answers relating to their personal lives and were questioned on their home addresses, workplaces, social media history and parents' professions.

Sakina said the agent told them that he had already performed checks on the family and was simply verifying the information, before warning her that he would be "doing more research on you, and if anything comes back, I'll be here waiting on your return".

The siblings, who are from northwest London. were then allowed back on the plane, which had been delayed.

'Nervous and embarrassed'

"I was extremely nervous and embarrassed," said Sakina, who also wrote an account of the event on her Facebook page.

"I thought, shouldn't they [the agent and police officers] be coming up [on the plane] with us, to show the other passengers that we hadn't done anything wrong, to say, 'Don't worry, it was a misunderstanding?'

"Our holiday in Italy was ruined. It played on our minds the whole time."

EasyJet confirmed the incident to Al Jazeera.

"Following concerns raised by a passenger during the boarding of flight ... a member of ground staff requested the assistance of the police who took the decision to talk to three passengers at the bottom of the aircraft steps, before departure," the company said.

"The safety and security of ... passengers and crew is our highest priority which means that if a security concern is raised we will always investigate it as a precautionary measure.

"We would like to apologise for any inconvenience caused to the passengers."

Sakina said she and her siblings were victims of "racial profiling".

"I'm still very annoyed that someone [the accusing passengers] can get away with a blatant lie," she said, adding that she would take legal action "if I knew a way to do so".

The incident comes at a time of rising Islamophobia in the UK.

Sakina said before the plane experience, that she had received "the odd racist remark about my headscarf".

"With the way things are spun in the media and the climate we're in, we're growing accustomed to it, and desensitised ... More education is the best way to battle ignorance," she added.

Muslims around the world are increasingly subject to discrimination as Islam is conflated with "terrorism".

'Humiliating public interrogations'

Rights groups said that while security was important, efforts should be made to protect innocent people.

"It's absolutely right that security is a foremost priority for airlines, and that genuine causes for concern are properly investigated to guarantee the safety of passengers," Rosie Brighouse, a legal officer at the UK-based rights group Liberty, told Al Jazeera.

"However, it is also important that innocent people aren't subjected to humiliating public interrogations, and it is therefore incumbent on the authorities to use their common sense, and subject reported concerns to basic credibility checks, before deciding how to respond."

Yasmine Ahmed, director of Rights Watch UK, said the Dharas' case raised "serious human rights concerns".

"It is completely unacceptable that young, British Muslims are subject to this treatment," she told Al Jazeera.

"The government must immediately explain under what powers they acted, and how it is necessary and proportionate, on the basis of a spurious claim by a fellow passenger, to demand that three young British Muslims disembark an aircraft and be subject to questioning by an MI5 officer and told that the officer may be waiting for them on their return."

Such action carried a "risk [of] having a counterproductive effect by alienating and isolating young, British Muslims," she said.

"Incidents such as these, which unfortunately are all too familiar, raise very serious questions about whether the government is genuinely committed to upholding the very British values that it espouses in its counter terrorism strategy and whether the government's counter terrorism strategy is driven by efficacy or popularism."

"I've never been quite sure what the point of a eunuch is, if truth be told. It seems to me they're only men with the useful bits cut off."
I drank because I wanted to drown my sorrows, but now the damned things have learned to swim.

Valmy

Oh yeah that crew sure looks like some hard core ISIS types.
Quote"This is a Russian warship. I propose you lay down arms and surrender to avoid bloodshed & unnecessary victims. Otherwise, you'll be bombed."

Zmiinyi defenders: "Russian warship, go fuck yourself."

Valmy

Quote from: Razgovory on April 19, 2016, 11:35:18 AM
I think has to do with far more with profiling then what one idiot thought  a person said.  I doubt they would mistake you or I saying that.  If we should take precautions with one group why not another?  A blood test for AIDS can't be done and processed every morning for a gay person.  The safest course would be to keep them out of the hospital all together, wouldn't it?

Appropriate profiling is that if somebody is an associate of known terrorist groups or groups that support and fund terrorist activities. Which, as far as I know, is pretty uncontroversial.
Quote"This is a Russian warship. I propose you lay down arms and surrender to avoid bloodshed & unnecessary victims. Otherwise, you'll be bombed."

Zmiinyi defenders: "Russian warship, go fuck yourself."

Ed Anger

Quote from: Valmy on August 24, 2016, 02:53:48 PM
Oh yeah that crew sure looks like some hard core ISIS types.

I'd do both sisters at the same time.
Stay Alive...Let the Man Drive

CountDeMoney


Tonitrus

#173
Quote from: Ed Anger on August 24, 2016, 06:47:06 PM
Quote from: Valmy on August 24, 2016, 02:53:48 PM
Oh yeah that crew sure looks like some hard core ISIS types.

I'd do both sisters at the same time.

I was just going through the replies, thinking "how long until someone suggests the ménage à trois?"  :P


CountDeMoney


Ed Anger

Stay Alive...Let the Man Drive

CountDeMoney

I'd hit it like an arms deal cancellation, just to slip it in later on.

Ed Anger

Stay Alive...Let the Man Drive

CountDeMoney

I'd hit them with Bob McFarlane, a bible and a cake.  Not necessarily in that order.

Ed Anger

Stay Alive...Let the Man Drive