According to the AFP, Nigeria has "branded new security measures for passengers flying to the United States unfair and said they amounted to discrimination against its 150 million people." Nigeria, home of failed underwear bomber Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, is one of 14 countries from which all air travellers to the U.S. will be "subjected to extra checks including body pat-downs."
I tend to agree with Nigerian Information Minister Dora Akunyili that "Abdulmutallab's behaviour is not reflective of Nigerians and should therefore not be used as a yardstick to judge all Nigerians." After all, "[h]e was not influenced in Nigeria. He was not recruited or trained in Nigeria. He was not supported whatsoever in Nigeria."
Besides, if terrorists want to enter the U.S. by air, they just won't try to do so from one of those 14 countries. So, yes, this seems like fairly arbitrary discrimination. I understand that Nigeria is one of those "countries of interest" identified by the Transport Security Administration (TSA) -- as it isn't a state-sponsor of terrorism -- but whether it actually deserves to be is another matter, and it probably shouldn't be, unless the U.S. wants to broaden its definition of "countries of interest" to pretty much any non-western country. Although, again, given that Islamic terrorists have been active in countries like Spain and the U.K., where should the line be drawn? It seems to be that a more nuanced approach to fighting terrorism is preferable to broad vilifications of entire countries.
Then again, maybe the Nigerians should stop sending all those "you've won a billion dollars, send all your personal information" spam e-mails if they want to win some goodwill from Americans (and the rest of us).
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