Fikre alleges that he traveled to Sudan in late 2009 in pursuit of growing an electronics business in his native East Africa. The FBI questioned him while in Sudan, according to court filings, telling Fikre he was on the No Fly List and could be removed if he became an informant.

Fikre allegedly refused and moved to the United Arab Emirates, where he claims he was then abducted and tortured for months by the country’s secret police at the FBI’s request. After leaving the United Arab Emirates, Fikre says he moved to Sweden, filed his lawsuit and sought asylum.

  • @brygphilomena@lemmy.world
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    08 months ago

    While I agree that this should be handled with due process, I disagree with your conclusion that this is infringing on someone’s right of movement (outside of international flights.)

    It would affect your access to a mode of transportation, but not the transportation itself. Something that we already have restrictions on outside of air travel, such as drivers licenses.

    Regardless, it’s still a fucked up authoritarian list and process.

    • @uis@lemm.ee
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      -18 months ago

      It would affect your access to a mode of transportation

      What if you have sea sickness?

      such as drivers licenses.

      Name country that requires driver’s licence to be passanger.