Shaveta Bansal - All Headline News Staff Writer
New
York, NY (AHN) - Raed Jarrar, an Iraqi peace activist was forced to
conceal his T-shirt, while boarding a JetBlue Airways flight to
Oakland, Calif., which the officials told him, was offensive. According
to Jarrar, the incident happened on Aug 12 at JFK airport, when four
officials approached him and told that he could not board with the
shirt saying "We will not be silent," on.
One official told
him, "Going to an airport with a T-shirt in Arabic script is like going
to a bank and wearing a T-shirt that says, 'I'm a robber,"' he said.
Jarrar,
who directs the Iraq project for Global Exchange, a San Francisco-based
human rights organization, said he refused a suggestion from the
officials that he turn his shirt inside out. Thereafter, the officials
gave Jarrar another shirt to wear over his.
Jarrar said he was
also forced to give up his seat near the front of the plane and was
issued a new boarding pass for a seat in the rear.
JetBlue
confirmed the incident and that it was investigating. It was not clear
whether it was officials from JetBlue, the federal Transportation
Security Administration or the Port Authority of New York and New
Jersey, which runs the airport, who told Jarrar to remove his shirt,
the airlines said.
The incident came two days after the
British authorities announced that they had foiled a plot to blow up
transatlantic jetliners.
"We Will Not Be Silent" is a slogan adopted by opponents of the war in Iraq and other conflicts in the Middle East.