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Thursday, August 4, 2016
British Muslim woman detained under terror laws after cabin crew report her reading Syrian art book on plane
Faziah
Shaheen was quizzed under terror laws after Thomson Airways cabin crew
saw her reading a book about Syrian art on her honeymoon flight
A
Muslim NHS worker was detained at a UK airport and questioned under
terror laws after a cabin crew member spotted her reading a Syrian
culture book on board her honeymoon flight.
Faizah Shaheen, who
helps prevent teenage mental health patients from becoming radicalised,
was returning from honeymoon in Marmaris, Turkey, when she was stopped
by South Yorkshire Police at Doncaster Airport on 25 July.
The
27-year-old was pulled over because a Thomson Airways cabin crew member
on her outbound flight a fortnight earlier had reported her for
suspicious behaviour.
Police
officers questioned her for 15 minutes under Schedule 7 of the
Terrorism Act and told her the suspicions related to the holiday book
she had been reading – Syria Speaks: Art and Culture from the Frontline.
The
award-winning book by Malu Halasa is a collection of essays, short
stories, poems, songs, cartoons and photographs from Syrian authors and
artists.
Ms Shaheen, from Leeds, said she was left angry and in
tears by the experience – and with a feeling she had been discriminated
because of her faith.
She said she now intends to make formal complaints against the police and Thomson Airways.
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Video shows Muslim family kicked off flight (April 2016)
She said: “I was completely innocent – I was made to feel like a culprit.”
Recalling
the incident, she said: “I was queuing at passport control and saw
police staring at me. I just got through passport control and then two
police officers approached me and took me aside and asked me to show my
passport again.
“I asked what was going on and they said I had
been reported due to a book I was reading and was to be questioned under
the Terrorism Act.
Faizah Shaheen works in the NHS helping to prevent vulnerable teenagers from being radicalised
“I
became very angry and upset. I couldn’t understand how reading a book
could cause people to suspect me like this. I told the police that I
didn’t think it was right or acceptable.”
She was given an
information leaflet explaining that Schedule 7 legislation is used by
police to determine whether a person appears to be or has been involved
in terrorism.
“I was asked what I do,” she said. “I told them I
work as a child and adolescent mental health services practitioner for
the NHS.
“Ironically, a part of my job role is working on
anti-radicalisation and assessing vulnerable young people with mental
health problems are at risk of being radicalised.
“I said that to the police. I’m actually part of trying to fight radicalisation and breaking the stereotypes.
Labour MP Keith Vaz has called on Thomson Airways to apologise (Getty)
“It
was a very hurtful experience to go through,” she said. “I fight for
different causes and then to be victimised and experience this
first-hand and made me realise how bad it is.
“Instead of reminiscing about our honeymoon I am left talking about this experience.
“I do question if whether it would be different if it was someone who wasn’t Muslim.”
The
book she was reading was the winner of an English PEN award. Ms Shaheen
bought it after it was recommended to her at Bradford literature
festival in May.
Labour MP Keith Vaz, who chairs the Home Affairs Committee, said the airline had overreacted.
He
said: “In the current climate people are worried. But there is always a
balance to be struck in circumstances of this kind. We want the public
to report suspicious activity.
"Reasonable people would not
regard reading a book on Syria on its own, without any other concerns,
as warranting the questioning of an individual. Thomson Airways should
accept that a mistake was made and apologise to the woman concerned. I
am sure if they had done so there would have been a better understanding
of the entire situation.”
The award-winning 'Syria Speaks: Art and Culture from the Frontline' by Malu Halasa
Thomson Airways said its crew are compelled to report any concerns as a precaution, but it understood Ms Shaheen’s frustration.
A
spokesman said in a statement: “Our crew undergo general safety and
security awareness training on a regular basis. As part of this they are
encouraged to be vigilant and share any information or questions with
the relevant authorities.
“We appreciate that in this instance Ms
Shaheen may have felt that overcaution had been exercised. However,
like all airlines, our crew are trained to report any concerns they may
have as a precaution.“
A spokeswoman for South Yorkshire Police
said: “On 25 July, 2016, officers from South Yorkshire Police stopped
and examined a woman under Schedule 7 of the Terrorism Act 2000 at
Doncaster Airport.
“She was not arrested, she was held for 15 minutes and was subsequently released.”
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