Montreal Gazette

Ex-Guantanamo inmate barred from flight to Montreal

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A former Guantanamo prisoner who was invited to address a conference on youth radicaliza­tion in Montreal says he was prevented from boarding a flight in France because the aircraft would fly through U.S. airspace.

Mourad Benchellal­i, who addresses youth groups in Europe in a bid to dissuade them from joining the Islamic State or other groups waging holy war in Syria and Iraq, was not allowed to board the Air Transat flight from Lyon to Montreal.

Air Transat said because the flight flies through U.S. airspace, its personnel had to apply the provisions of a U.S. security program known as Secure Flight — a program that checks passengers against the U.S. No Fly list.

Benchellal­i, 33, who was released from the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in July 2004, said in a telephone interview he was unaware he was on the U.S. list.

He has flown to other destinatio­ns in Europe and beyond, but this was the first time he planned a trans-Atlantic flight.

Benchellal­i was to attend a conference on peace and another on the phenomenon of radicaliza­tion of Western youth who have headed by the thousands to Syria.

“I wasn’t going on vacation. I was going for prevention,” he said in the interview.

At check-in, he said he was informed that “there is a problem because the plane crosses American airspace.”

The U.S. Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion receives flight manifests for any commercial flight that will either land in the United States or fly over U.S. airspace as part of the Secure Flight program.

Conference organizers expressed shock that their guest was barred from his flight. Police and university researcher­s were to take part in a conference organized by the Observator­y of Radicaliza­tion in addition to a conference entitled “48 Hours for Peace.”

 ??  ?? Mourad Benchellal­i
Mourad Benchellal­i

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