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Sat, Jun 16, 2007

Canadian No-Fly List Activates Next Week

Carrier Worried About Employees Who Encounter List Hits

The Canadian version of the no-fly list will become official June 18... and Air Canada has voiced concern for its front-line staff that comes across someone who is actually on the list, and the potential reaction such a discovery might produce.

Air Canada's head of security, Yves Duguay, told the Air India inquiry in Ottawa Friday while the carrier supports the idea of a no-fly list, it wonders about dealing with someone when they learn they are on the list. If staff makes a hit, they are supposed to notify law enforcement, prevent the person from boarding and explain why, according to the National Post.

"Our foremost concern is of course for the safety and concern of our front-line staff and the customers at the check-in counter should there be a match, should someone show up at the counter and we identify that person as being a person on the interdiction list," Duguay, a former Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer, told inquiry head John Major.

"The situation could turn to an unruly situation very quickly when the person finds out that they cannot fly."

According to Transport Canada, the no-fly list may include "an individual who is or has been involved in a terrorist group, and who, it can reasonably be suspected, will endanger the security of any aircraft or aerodrome or the safety of the public, passengers, or crew members" or someone who has been convicted of "serious and life-threatening offenses".

According to Duguay, police officers will be standing by at the ready at major Canadian airports, but that might not be the case at the carrier's international destinations.

"There is the possibility that the situation could be very tense and we have to have an authority figure in place to diffuse that situation. So we want to make sure we have a police presence, not only in Canada but that this is something that should also be addressed abroad because of the type of situation we have," he said.

The move to initiate a no-fly list similar to the US's has had its share of controversy and opposition. In addition to safety concerns, privacy issues top the list.

A Transport Canada official testified last week at the inquiry it was possible information on the list could wind up in another government's hands, despite best attempts to keep it as confidential as possible, according to the Vancouver Sun.

Duguay said Air Canada would be very careful with the information, but some information would have to be shared with police at foreign airports.

Jennifer Stoddart, Canada's privacy commissioner, anticipates the list becoming "quite a nightmare" for normal, everyday Canadians.

"Every time we go to the airport, do we expect to be challenged? That may be the new world," she said.

Itrath Syed, research associate at University of British Columbia's Center for Women and Gender Studies and civil-rights activist, told the Vancouver Georgia Straight last month she fears the compilation of the list was a "very arbitrary process".

"I think the issue here is if people are being suspected of something, then they should be charged," she said. "If there is not enough evidence to charge someone, what is the evidence then to deny someone the right to mobility? If you're going to be on the list, you should be told and told why, so you would have a chance to do something about it."

Duguay also chairs a security committee at the International Air Transport Association. He said Air Canada would work with Transport Canada on concerns about the list and its application, but notes the list t is based on gathered intelligence and will likely be very short and rarely used by airlines.

"As the deadline looms, at Air Canada we will undertake to contact local police forces when we've identified an exact match to our system," he said.

FMI: www.aircanada.com, www.privcom.gc.ca, www.tc.gc.ca

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