Canada Sikh Minister asked to remove turban at US airport

Senior US officials forced to apologise as incident comes after he had passed through a metal detector without any problem.

May 11, 2018 12:24 pm | Updated December 01, 2021 12:29 pm IST - TORONTO:

In this November 4, 2015 photo, Canada’s Innovation, Science and Economic Development Minister Navdeep Bains (left) is seen with a beaming Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at Rideau Hall in Ottawa. Mr. Bains, a devout Sikh, was forced to remove his turban at the Detroit airport even after he was cleared by a metal detector. The incident has generated bad blood, forcing top US officials to apologise.

In this November 4, 2015 photo, Canada’s Innovation, Science and Economic Development Minister Navdeep Bains (left) is seen with a beaming Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at Rideau Hall in Ottawa. Mr. Bains, a devout Sikh, was forced to remove his turban at the Detroit airport even after he was cleared by a metal detector. The incident has generated bad blood, forcing top US officials to apologise.

A Canadian Sikh Minister was asked to take off his turban at a Detroit airport during a security check despite passing through the metal detector without any problem, prompting senior United States officials to apologise, media reports have said.

Navdeep Bains, Canada’s Minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Development, described the incident in an interview with the French-language paper La Presse on Thursday.

Mr. Bains was returning to Toronto after meetings with Michigan state leaders in April 2017 and had already passed through regular security checks at the Detroit Metro Airport, but because he was wearing a turban, a security agent told him that he would have to undergo additional checks, according to La Presse .

“He told me to take off my turban. I asked him why I would have to take off my turban when the metal detector had worked properly,” the Minister said.

Is this US law only on paper?

The US amended its travel policy in 2007, allowing Sikhs to keep turbans on while passing during the security inspection process.

Mr. Bains said that when he travels, he rarely discloses his identity as a Cabinet Minister, in order to better understand the travel experiences — and frustrations — of people not afforded similar privileges.

The incident prompted Canada’s Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland to express disappointment to her US counterparts.

Both Undersecretaries for the US Homeland Security and Transportation Departments apologised for the incident.

In a statement to CBC, a spokesperson for the Transportation Security Administration said it reviewed closed-circuit video of the incident and determined the officer did not follow standard operating procedures; the officer subsequently received additional training.

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