Homeland Security Tightens Grip on International Travel
By Ezekiel
11/04/06 "SFTS" -- -A radical change in international travel
rules has been lost in these tumultuous last few months that
have seen the demise of habeas corpus, the legalization
of torture and the expansion of the President's martial law
powers.
The Department of Homeland Security proposed
new rules back in July that would fundamentally undermine
the right of American citizens to travel abroad. Public
carriers--airlines, cruise lines, even fishing boats--will be
required to submit the names of all passengers to
Homeland Security prior to departure and to obtain permission
from Homeland Security to board those passengers. These new
rules will take effect January 14, 2007.
Current practices already represent a severe restriction on
the right to travel. The "no-fly list" dates back to 1990, but
Patriot Act I created a new agency, the Transportation Security
Administration, that was charged with creating and maintaining a
list of people who were not allowed to board airplanes. The
list was
reported to have contained around 1,000 names by the end of
2001 of people strictly forbidden to fly plus a second longer
list of "selectees" who were to be called out of line and
subjected to closer searches and intense questioning before they
were allowed to board. Many American politcal activists
reported that they were on the "selectee" list. These lists of
names were provided to airlines who were charged with the task
of separating out listed passengers and notifying authorities.
In December, 2005, a Swedish airline
leaked that the list had grown from 1,000 to over 80,000.
The new procedure will completely eliminate the opportunity
for the public to find out how many people are on the list. No
airline or cruise company will ever receive a "no-fly" or "selectee"
list. Instead of providing a passenger manifest
after departure as now required by the Customs and
Border Patrol, airlines, cruise lines and other public carriers
will have to provide a provisional pasenger list prior to
departure. This list will be checked against a Homeland
Security list of citizens approved for international travel, and
the carrier will be ordered not to board those who are not
approved. This is from the proposed rule itself:
Therefore, CBP [Customas and Border Patrol] has concluded
that the prevention of a high-risk passenger from boarding
an aircraft is the appropriate level of security in the
commercial air travel environment. Manifest data received
and vetted prior to passenger boarding will enable CBP to
attain this level of security. Further, this vetting of
passengers on international flights should eliminate the
need for passenger carriers to conduct watch list screening
of these passengers, upon publication and implementation of
a final rule. Accordingly, with this proposed rule,CBP is
proposing two transmission options for air carriers to
select from at their discretion: (i) the submission of
complete manifests no later than 60minutes prior to
departure or (ii)transmitting passenger data asindividual,
real-time transactions, i.e.,as each passenger checks in, up
to but no later than 15 minutes prior todeparture.
Under both options, the carrier will not permit the boarding
of a passenger unless the passenger has been cleared by CBP.
Seagoing vessels are required to submit their
list 60 minutes prior to departure under the rule.
Who will be on the list? That's a secret. What criteria
will determine who is on and who is off the list? That's a
secret. How many people will be approved and how many will
not? That's a secret. If you're not on the approved list, how
can you petition the government to change your status? You
can't.
The non-profit Identity Project has filed
comments with Homeland Security urging that the rule changes
be dropped. They argue that they violate the U. S. Constitution
and international law:
The [proposed rule change] would replace a requirement
for ex post facto notice to the CBP of information about who
is on each vessel (ship or plane) with anunconstitutional
system of prior restraint of international travel, entirely
unauthorized by statute and inconsistent with the U.S.
obligations embodied in the International Covenant on Civil
and PoliticalRights. Under the proposed rules, orders by
the CBP [Customs adn Border Patrol] to common carriers not
to transport specific persons would not be based on
restraining orders (injunctions) issued by competent
judicial authorities. Instead,they would be based on an
undefined, secret, administrative permission-to-travel
(“clearance”) procedure subject to none of the procedural or
substantive due process required for orders prohibiting or
restricting the exercise of protected First Amendment
rights. From the authority of law enforcement officers
andagencies to enforce certain types of orders, once
lawfully issued by competent judicial authorities, the
[proposed rule change] would usurp for the CBP the authority
to issue those orders on its own.
I remember watching Sound of Music when I was a
child and feeling my heart race as the Von Trapp family made its
escape from Nazified Austria. I could never have imagined that
a day would come when those wanting to leave the United States
would be forced to "make a run" for the border to evade a myriad
of obstacles placed by an American
government in the path of those who wished to exercise their
fundamental human right to emigrate.
That day has not yet arrived. But it will on January 14.
(C) 2006 Shelter from the Storm:
http://shelter.inkom.hr