Checkmate at the Check-In. Discrimination or Transatlantic People Smuggling from Brussels National Airport

Pursuant to the so-called American travel ban, nationals from Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen were denied access to US territory. Consequently airline companies are performing additional checks at the check-in in order to avoid allowing passengers on board who are not in the possession of the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wendy De Bondt, Nele Audenaert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bergen 2018-02-01
Series:Bergen Journal of Criminal Law and Criminal Justice
Online Access:https://voices.no/index.php/BJCLCJ/article/view/1459
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spelling doaj-d0c77130963f4eaa82f15745680569402020-11-25T02:21:54ZengUniversity of BergenBergen Journal of Criminal Law and Criminal Justice1894-41832018-02-015210.15845/bjclcj.v5i2.1459Checkmate at the Check-In. Discrimination or Transatlantic People Smuggling from Brussels National AirportWendy De Bondt0Nele Audenaert1Ghent UniversityGhent University Pursuant to the so-called American travel ban, nationals from Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen were denied access to US territory. Consequently airline companies are performing additional checks at the check-in in order to avoid allowing passengers on board who are not in the possession of the required travelling documents to be allowed into the United States. The authors argue that the American travel ban puts airline companies operating from Brussels National Airport, Belgium within the scope of several criminal law provisions. Obeying the travel ban and denying the passengers access to the plane could constitute a form of indirect discrimination based on nationality. Disobeying the travel ban and granting the passengers access to the plane could constitute a form of people smuggling. In its current form, taking account of the interpretation provided in jurisprudence, the Belgian criminal law does not provide a clear way out of this situation. The situation is therefore described as checkmate at the check-in and is used to urge policy makers to provide a more clear legal framework for companies (in this case airline companies) who find themselves confronted with incompatibilities between different legal systems.   https://voices.no/index.php/BJCLCJ/article/view/1459
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wendy De Bondt
Nele Audenaert
spellingShingle Wendy De Bondt
Nele Audenaert
Checkmate at the Check-In. Discrimination or Transatlantic People Smuggling from Brussels National Airport
Bergen Journal of Criminal Law and Criminal Justice
author_facet Wendy De Bondt
Nele Audenaert
author_sort Wendy De Bondt
title Checkmate at the Check-In. Discrimination or Transatlantic People Smuggling from Brussels National Airport
title_short Checkmate at the Check-In. Discrimination or Transatlantic People Smuggling from Brussels National Airport
title_full Checkmate at the Check-In. Discrimination or Transatlantic People Smuggling from Brussels National Airport
title_fullStr Checkmate at the Check-In. Discrimination or Transatlantic People Smuggling from Brussels National Airport
title_full_unstemmed Checkmate at the Check-In. Discrimination or Transatlantic People Smuggling from Brussels National Airport
title_sort checkmate at the check-in. discrimination or transatlantic people smuggling from brussels national airport
publisher University of Bergen
series Bergen Journal of Criminal Law and Criminal Justice
issn 1894-4183
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Pursuant to the so-called American travel ban, nationals from Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen were denied access to US territory. Consequently airline companies are performing additional checks at the check-in in order to avoid allowing passengers on board who are not in the possession of the required travelling documents to be allowed into the United States. The authors argue that the American travel ban puts airline companies operating from Brussels National Airport, Belgium within the scope of several criminal law provisions. Obeying the travel ban and denying the passengers access to the plane could constitute a form of indirect discrimination based on nationality. Disobeying the travel ban and granting the passengers access to the plane could constitute a form of people smuggling. In its current form, taking account of the interpretation provided in jurisprudence, the Belgian criminal law does not provide a clear way out of this situation. The situation is therefore described as checkmate at the check-in and is used to urge policy makers to provide a more clear legal framework for companies (in this case airline companies) who find themselves confronted with incompatibilities between different legal systems.  
url https://voices.no/index.php/BJCLCJ/article/view/1459
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