Last Updated: Tue Nov 02, 2010 20:25 pm (KSA) 17:25 pm (GMT)

US airport questioning angers Bollywood stars

Shahrukh Khan said the way he had been treated left him "angry and humiliated"
Shahrukh Khan said the way he had been treated left him "angry and humiliated"

The Indian government said Sunday the United States must explain why Bollywood star Shahrukh Khan was questioned at a New York airport, after the actor suggested he was singled out as a Muslim.

Khan, who was interviewed by officials at Newark Liberty International Airport, told an Indian television station by telephone that Khan "is a Muslim name and I think the name is common on their checklist."

Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel told reporters that India would "take the issue (up) with the United States government strongly."

 Anger erupts over Shahrukh's insult...Humiliating religious profiling of iconic star at U.S. airport shocks India 
Dainik Jagran, Indian newspaper

"Such incidents involving Indians due to their religion or nationality should not happen," he said. "We will not accept it."

The minister's intervention came after India's Sunday newspapers railed against the treatment of Khan, who has a huge following in the Hindu-majority country.

"Anger erupts over Shahrukh's insult," read the front page of the Hindi-language Dainik Jagran, while the Mail Today declared "Humiliating religious profiling of iconic star at U.S. airport shocks India."

But U.S. officials said that Khan, India's leading screen heartthrob, was subject only to routine procedures when he landed on Friday.

United States Customs and Border Protection agency spokesman Kevin Corsaro told AFP that one reason Khan, 43, had been delayed was that his luggage was lost.

"The inspection process may include a more in-depth interview and baggage examination," the agency said in a statement, adding the incident had lasted little more than an hour.

Khan, who took part in celebrations in Chicago on Saturday marking India's Independence Day, said the way he had been treated left him "angry and humiliated."

Fox Star Studios has recently struck a deal to finance and distribute "My Name is Khan," a movie due out next year starring Khan as an Indian Muslim setting out on a journey across the U.S.

It features the contentious subject of racial profiling after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.

Airport searches are a sensitive privacy issue in India, where similar outrage erupted last month when former president Abdul Kalam, also a Muslim, was frisked by U.S. airline staff in Delhi before boarding a flight to New York.

Kalam was searched despite protocol at Indian airports exempting dignitaries from security checks, and the airline later apologised.

Celebrities' experiences

 I can understand America's need for caution after 9/11 but they also need to be a little more thoughtful about their methods 
Irrfan Khan, Indian actor

Fellow Bollywood stars sprang to Khan's defence at the weekend and told of their experiences at the hands of U.S. immigration officials.

Irrfan Khan, who played the police inspector in last year's hit film Slumdog Millionaire, said that U.S. screening staff seemed "threatened by any Muslim passport."

"I can understand America's need for caution after 9/11 but they also need to be a little more thoughtful about their methods," he said, adding he had been detained three times for questioning in various parts of the world.

Neil Nitin Mukesh said he had been detained in New York by an officer who appeared to believe he was too fair-skinned to be Indian and may have a false passport.

Shahrukh Khan's troubles were "yet another example of American paranoia post-9/11", director Kabir Khan said. "It saddens me to say this but I don't think the U.S. will ever be cured of Islamophobia."

The Press Trust of India news agency reported an effigy of U.S. President Barack Obama was burnt in the city of Allahabad in protest at Khan's ordeal.

United States Ambassador to India Timothy Roemer attempted to calm the furore by issuing a statement on Saturday describing Khan as a "global icon" who was a welcome guest in the United States.

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