logo
How to prepare for a US trip from someone rejected at the border

How to prepare for a US trip from someone rejected at the border

The majority of travellers entering the US will have no problem, says writer Alistair Kitchen. But if you're not fine, he warns, "let me tell you, it will be a traumatic experience".
Alistair Kitchen flew from Melbourne to New York to visit friends two weeks ago. During a stopover in Los Angeles, the 33-year-old writer was pulled from the customs line, detained for around 12 hours by border agents, and questioned about his views on the Israel-Palestine conflict.
Kitchen was a student at Columbia University in New York last year, where he covered pro-Palestinian rallies on his personal blog.
He realised something was wrong when he first got off the plane, he told RNZ's Afternoons.
'I stepped into that hall at LAX where they process your passport. And before I could even get in the queue, my name was called over the loudspeaker.
'And that by itself is pretty strange when you're in a crowd of a thousand people. And I was pulled into the backroom and my phone was demanded and my passcode was demanded.
'And I realised at that moment that this wasn't random or ad hoc, but they had been waiting for me.'
Border agents told him, he says, the reason he was being questioned was because of posts he wrote about the protests at Columbia University which he says would be considered mainstream views in Australia or New Zealand.
He had taken those posts down days before he boarded the plane, he says.
Even though he felt he had prepared sufficiently prior to the flight, in hindsight, he says, he was never going to be let in the country.
'I prepared for a situation which I think most travellers in Australia and New Zealand are right to prepare for, which is you go through the passport control, and you do make sure that your social media has been cleaned up, that your phone is missing messages that might have been critical of Donald Trump, for example.
'I think that's prudent and wise. In my case, it was not sufficient, exactly because they had already done this background search on me. Because they had already done that work, in my view, I was never going to get through.'
When he was taken into detention, he says he was told that if he did not hand over his passcode and phone, he would be immediately deported.
'Obviously, I hesitated and declined to give them my passcode when they first asked for it.
'They then said, that's fine, we'll deport you right now. And I made the mistake at that moment of complying. And I did that because I still had hope.
'I still had the sense that, hey, I write a blog that no one reads. Surely these are reasonable people. Surely, they'll see that I don't pose a threat to anyone.'
The Department of Homeland Security has denied Kitchen was deported over his political views.
'The individual in question was denied entry because he gave false information on his ESTA application regarding drug use", it said in a statement.
Kitchen says they downloaded the contents of his phone and after 'grilling' him on his views on Israel-Palestine they said they'd found evidence on his phone he'd misrepresented himself to them about drug use on his ETSA form and would have to send him home.
'What happened in that moment is that I, 15 hours off a flight from Melbourne, started imagining all manner of evidence on my phone that I now know does not exist.'
He admitted he had done drugs before.
'Among other things, I bought weed in New York, which is legal in the state, but illegal federally. Having admitted to it, they had even more grounds to deport me.
'That's not something I'm disputing. What is clear is that I was only selected at the beginning because of my political speech. And I know that because they told me.'
He advises people travelling to the US take a basic burner phone.
'Buy a second phone, text your mum on it, take a bunch of pictures, but have only content on it that you can absolutely account for.'
He did a 'cursory and superficial' cleanup of his phone which 'turned out to be totally insufficient".
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israel looking to re-settle Gazans in South Sudan
Israel looking to re-settle Gazans in South Sudan

Otago Daily Times

timean hour ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Israel looking to re-settle Gazans in South Sudan

South Sudan and Israel are discussing a deal to resettle Palestinians from war-torn Gaza in the troubled African nation, three sources told Reuters - a plan quickly dismissed as unacceptable by Palestinian leaders. The sources, who have knowledge of the matter but spoke on condition of anonymity, said no agreement had been reached but talks between South Sudan and Israel were ongoing. The plan, if carried further, would envisage people moving from an enclave shattered by almost two years of war with Israel to a nation in the heart of Africa riven by years of political and ethnically-driven violence. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office and Israel's foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the information from the three sources. A spokesperson for the U.S. State Department said, "we do not speak to private diplomatic conversations," when asked about the plan and if the United States supported the idea. Netanyahu said this month he intends to extend military control in Gaza, and this week repeated suggestions that Palestinians should leave the territory voluntarily. Arab and world leaders have rejected the idea of moving Gaza's population to any country. Palestinians say that would be like another "Nakba" (catastrophe) when hundreds of thousands fled or were forced out during the Arab-Israeli war of 1948. The three sources said the prospect of resettling Palestinians in South Sudan was raised during meetings between Israeli officials and South Sudanese Foreign Minister Monday Semaya Kumba when he visited the country last month. Their account appeared to contradict South Sudan's foreign ministry which on Wednesday dismissed earlier reports on the plan as "baseless". The ministry was not immediately available to respond to the sources' assertions on Friday. News of the discussions was first reported by the Associated Press on Tuesday, citing six people with knowledge of the matter. Wasel Abu Youssef, a member of the Executive Committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization, said the Palestinian leadership and people "reject any plan or idea to displace any of our people to South Sudan or to any other place". His statement echoed a statement from the office of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on Thursday. Hamas, which is fighting Israel in Gaza, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Sharren Haskel, who visited the South Sudanese capital Juba this week, told reporters that those discussions had not focussed on relocation. "This is not what the discussions were about," she said when asked if any such plan had been discussed. "The discussions were about foreign policy, about multilateral organisations, about the humanitarian crisis, the real humanitarian crisis happening in South Sudan, and about the war," she said, referring to her talks with Juba officials. Netanyahu, who met Kumba last month, has said Israel is in touch with a few countries to find a destination for Palestinians who want to leave Gaza. He has consistently declined to provide further details.

Ban on protesting outside homes rebalances freedom of expression and privacy rights
Ban on protesting outside homes rebalances freedom of expression and privacy rights

RNZ News

time3 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Ban on protesting outside homes rebalances freedom of expression and privacy rights

Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith has announced protesting outside someone's home will become an offence. Photo: RNZ / Mark Papalii The government's ban on protesting outside someone's home will rebalance the right to freedom of expression and the right to privacy, a law professor says. But another academic has questioned whether a new law is necessary, and says police may struggle to enforce it. Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith announced on Friday protesting outside someone's home would become an offence, punishable with a fine or jail time. While it would apply to all residences, Goldsmith said there had been increased reports of demonstrations targeting the homes of public figures like MPs, judges and other officials. Otago University law professor Andrew Geddis said current laws around protests only related to public settings. "Protests that take place outside someone's home really do intrude into a sort of domestic sphere where people usually feel they should be able to exist unperturbed and unthreatened," he said. "So this particular change in the law will help to restrike that balance." Otago University law professor Andrew Geddis. Photo: RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly Geddis said the change would plug a legal gap highlighted by a Supreme Court ruling nearly two decades ago. The 2007 case, Brooker v Police, involved a man who was convicted of disorderly behaviour for standing outside a police officer's house playing the guitar and singing protest songs against her, he said. But the Supreme Court found his behaviour was not disorderly. "The Supreme Court said that disorderly behaviour only applies to the public consequences of your behaviour, how that affects the public place. "And just because it's intruding into someone's private home, that's not a consideration as to whether the protest is covered by disorderly behaviour," he said. It meant the balance between people's rights within their home and people's rights to protest in public was "out of whack", Geddis said. One of the judges noted the court's finding could lead to more protests outside people's homes, and Parliament would need to consider that at some point, he said. "It turns out he was right." Victoria University law professor Steven Price said police may find it hard to enforce the new law. Goldsmith said it would be tightly targeted and prohibit "unreasonable disruptions", but Price said the independent police watchdog's review of policing protests found officers struggled to make a call on that. "What the IPCA had to say about that ... is that police have trouble on the ground having to make fine distinctions about what's an unreasonable disruption and what's not, and that seems a fair point to make," he said. "But on the face of [Goldsmith's] press release, it doesn't really solve the problem." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Far-right Israeli minister pays surprise visit to jailed Palestinian leader
Far-right Israeli minister pays surprise visit to jailed Palestinian leader

RNZ News

time4 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Far-right Israeli minister pays surprise visit to jailed Palestinian leader

By Alexander Cornwell , Reuters Israel's Minister of National Security Itamar Ben-Gvir. Photo: DEBBIE HILL / POOL / AFP Israel's far-right national security minister visited prominent Palestinian Marwan Barghouti in jail and told him "you will not win", a video showed on Friday, a day after another hardline cabinet member vowed to "bury" the idea of a Palestinian state . Security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir shared the video on his X account, also telling Barghouti - a potential unifying figure among Palestinians, who has been jailed for more than two decades - that anyone who threatens Israel would be eliminated. The prison visit took place earlier this week but became public after ultra-nationalist Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said on Thursday (local time) work would start on a settlement that would bisect the West Bank and further cut it off from East Jerusalem, which Palestinians want as a capital for a future state. "This reality finally buries the idea of a Palestinian state. Simply because there is nothing to recognise and no one to recognise," Smotrich said at a news conference on Thursday. In the video clip on Ben-Gvir's X which showed Barghouti looking thin and weak, the minister told him: "You will not win. Anyone who messes with the people of Israel, anyone who murders our children, anyone who murders our women - we will wipe him out." "You have to know this, throughout history," he said in the 13-second clip which cut out Barghouti's reply. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office did not respond to a request for comment and a spokesman for Ben-Gvir declined to comment. The Palestinian Authority described Ben-Gvir's remarks as a "direct threat" to the 66-year-old. Barghouti is a senior member of the Fatah movement that runs the authority, which exercises limited civic rule in parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank. "The Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemns in the strongest terms the storming of the solitary confinement sections of Rimon Prison by extremist Minister Ben-Gvir and his direct threat to brother and leader Marwan Barghouti," it said in a statement. Barghouti was sentenced in 2004 to five life sentences and 40 years in jail after a court convicted him of orchestrating ambushes and suicide attacks on Israelis during the second Palestinian Intifada, or uprising. Israel regards Bargouthi as a dangerous militant over his part in the uprising, in which around 1000 Israelis and 3000 Palestinians were killed. He has long denied the charges against him. A big mural shows jailed Fatah leader Marwan Barghouti, in Jabalia refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip, in 2023. Photo: MAJDI FATHI / NurPhoto via AFP His wife addressed him in a post on Facebook. "They are still, Marwan, chasing you and pursuing you, even in the solitary cell you've been living in for two years," she said of the visit. Supporters of Barghouti say he is a top contender to succeed 89-year-old Mahmoud Abbas as Palestinian president one day, portraying him as a Nelson Mandela-like figure who could galvanise and reunite their divided political landscape. A poll by the Palestinian Centre for Policy and Survey Research published on 6 May showed he would secure 50 percent of the vote on a likely turnout of 64 percent in a three-way presidential race against Abbas and former Hamas chief Khaled Meshaal. Elections for the Palestinian Authority presidency have not been held since 2005. Most world powers support the idea of a two-state solution to the decades-old Israel-Palestinian conflict, with an independent Palestinian state encompassing the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem existing alongside Israel. The last round of Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations broke down more than a decade ago and the Palestinians say increasing settlement expansion is eroding the viability of a future state by fragmenting the territory they seek for it. The prospect of a two-state solution has receded further after Hamas' 7 October 2023 attack on Israel which triggered the Gaza war. Hamas says it is fighting for a Palestinian state but does not recognise Israel and its founding charter calls for Israel's elimination; Israel has the most far-right government in its history and the West Bank leadership is discredited among Palestinians for failing to halt settlement expansion. The United Nations has ruled the settlements illegal, a view disputed by Israel. Smotrich's announcement on Thursday (local time) drew a chorus of international criticism. Residents of West Bank village Atara said on Friday (local time) that their village was attacked by Israeli settlers who set fire to three cars and scrawled threatening graffiti on a wall. The Israeli military said it was looking into the incident. - Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store