Iranian-Canadians feel like '2nd-class citizens' as many continue to be stopped while travelling to the U.S. - Action News
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Iranian-Canadians feel like '2nd-class citizens' as many continue to be stopped while travelling to the U.S.

Many Iranian-Canadians are unable to go to the U.S. and other countries, as their past mandatory conscription in Iran is getting flagged after a Trump-era legislation tagged one of the branches of Iranian military as a terrorist organization.

'Am I not Canadian enough?' says man turned away at border

CBC News interviewed several Iranian-born Canadian citizens who were denied entry to the United States due to having been conscripted into the Iranian military as young men. (Elaine Thompson/The Associated Press)

Amir Abolhassani sold his house in Saskatoon when his U.S.-based employer asked him to relocate to North Carolina. But at the Calgary airport this January, his family was not allowed to crossthe border.

The U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officer told Abolhassani, who is a Canadian citizen, that it was because of time he spent as a conscript in Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps(IRGC) more than a decade ago. The family was subjected to a secondary screening involving a long interview and an extensive search of their belongings, cellphones and social media.

"It's like we are not Canadians and our lives, our suffering is not important to anyone," Abolhassani said.

"Am I not Canadian enough? The stress to be linked to a terrorist organization is the worst thing."

Amir Abolhassani says he wants Canada to clear his and other former conscripts' names. (Submitted by Amir Abolhassani)

The Trump administrationlabelled theIRGCas a terrorist organizationin 2019. Abolhassani saidall men in Iran above the age of 18 have to do mandatory servicewith one of the arms of the military.

"One in every three Iranians will be assigned to IRGC because it is one of the biggest branches of the military."

Abolhassani said refusing conscription would prevent a man from getting a passport or accessing civic amenities, and can sometimes lead to further punishment.

"I know around 500 cases, almost 150 are Iranian-Canadians and others are Iranians that are facing the same situation."

CBC News spoke with 15 Iranian-Canadians, all of them Canadian citizens, who continue to be stopped and detained while crossing into other countries due totheir names being flagged as people who have helped a terrorist organization. All say they feel they are treated as second-class citizens.

"The officer said my wife can't go to the U.S. either because she may have received military training from me. It's disastrous," Abolhassani said. "In two months of training, I held a weapon for three days. I have just fired four bullets in my life. A typical American teenager may have fired more."

'We're not real Canadians yet'

Worried about losing his job, the 41-year-old applied for a visa to the U.S.,but he is worried becausehe knows some people have been waiting for U.S. visas since 2019.

"We're not real Canadians yet. Once you are flagged at the U.S. border, your name enters a list that when you are travelling to or from Canada and any other ally of the U.S., you will be flagged," he said.

Maryam Ghasemi, a research assistant professor at the University of Waterloo, was supposed to begina new research position at Augusta University in Georgia on Aug. 1. When Ghasemi went to the Rainbow Bridge border office in Niagara Falls, Ont., in May to apply for aTN Visa,she was denied.

Ghasemi saidofficers from Homeland Security searched through her family's social media then escorted them to their car without givingany reasons.

"A CBPofficer told me having a passport of the country doesn't give me the nationality. She said my background is something else and that I'm not Canadian. That was really rude," she said.

Maryam Ghasemi said her family was given a letter of inadmissibility to the U.S. with no further explanation. Many Iranian-Canadians CBC spoke with shared similar letters. (Submitted by Maryam Ghasemi)

The family was given a letter of inadmissibility to the U.S. with no further explanation and was asked to consult the consulate in Toronto to get approved. An officer later told her it was becauseher husband had served inthe IRGC.

"The university has decided to postpone my position until next semester. But if the visa process doesn't work out, I will lose the position. The future is not clear to us."

Canada offloadingresponsibility to the U.S.

Ghasemi, like many others, contacted members of Parliament and the Prime Minister's Office, only to be told that it is not Canada's responsibility.

The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) told CBC News in an email statement that though itis aware of instances of Iranian-Canadians being denied entry to the U.S. and other countries, there is not an internal mechanism for tracking them.

"The CBSA does not possess any power or authority to intervene in the immigration decisions made by other nations," the statement said.

Global Affairs Canada shared a similar response.

"As a sovereign state, the U.S. retains the prerogative to determine the admissibility and the screening procedures for the entry of foreign nationals," a spokespersonsaid.

But Iranian-Canadians like Abolhassaniand Ghasemi say it is very much a Canadian problem.

"Wefeelwe are second-class citizens. I thought Canada would support us, but we are not very important. This is shameful," Ghasemi said.

"We want the government to stand up for us because they can solve it if they want to as they did with the Muslim ban. No one is taking action."

Like many others, Maryam Ghasemi has contacted members of parliament and the prime ministers office multiple times only to be told that it is not Canadas responsibility. (Submitted by Maryam Ghasemi)

CBC News reached out to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and CBP for a comment, but did not receive a response before publication.

4S on boarding pass

Iranian-Canadians with past conscription with IRGC often receive a "4S" designation, which stands for Secondary Security Screening Selection, on their boarding passes.

Javad Mokhtarzadeh, a business owner in Montreal, said that on a recent trip to Europehis family wasscreenedupon arrival and when they returnedto Canada, their boarding passes had 4S on them.

Javad Mokhtarzadeh says even other people accompanying a former conscript are subject to the '4S' secondary screening process. (Submitted by Javad Mokhtarzadeh)

"Officers talk to us as if we aren't Canadian citizens. You granted me citizenship [and] my daughter was born here. I told my five-year-old daughter, it's part of the game when passing airports," Mokhtarzadeh said.

"It was so frustrating and infuriatingthey asked my little girl to raise hands for body inspection and remove her shoes. In my own country, I'm treated this way and asked whether I have something to hide."

Calgary resident Kamran Farzamfar said the problem affects even Canadian-Iranians, those born in Canada but of Iranian descent.

Farzamfar's family of four visited the U.S. multiple times before 2019, for both leisure and work.But when theywent to the airport for their first vacation since the pandemic this past February, they were denied entry.

"I tried to ask the officer if they can let my sons go for holiday at least, but [they] refused us entry that day," Farzamfar said.

Calgary resident Kamran Farzamfar says he does not understand why his son born in Canada cannot travel to the U.S. or other countries. (Submitted by Kamran Farzamfar)

A few days later,the family tried again to have theirsons allowed in for the trip.

"My son, who was born here, was denied entry. This issue is not only affecting Iranian-Canadians but also Canadian-Iranians," he said.

On another occasion, when coming back fromFrankfurt, a friend accompanying Farzamfar was also given a 4S designation, as they were on the same booking reference.

'Zero rights as a Canadian'

Toronto resident Samin Kalhor tried to drive into the U.S. with his girlfriend, who had newly obtained Canadian citizenship, her mother and two little dogs. They were planning oncelebratingThanksgiving with family.

All three were stopped at the Buffalo border.

"They took my phone, credit cards, searched the car thoroughly and even the dogs. For five hours, they collectedbiometrics, fingerprints, retina scans and copied all the data from my phone including social media," he said.

"My girlfriend, who I'd known for two months, was also denied entry."

The couple met the same fate when travelling to Mexicofor the new year holiday.

Kalhorsaid he was interrogated for seven hoursin Cancun, in a room with glass walls with other "bad guys."

"All the passengers passing by could see me sitting there as if I did something wrong. They asked questions about my religion, sexuality, and everything you can imagine," he said. "It was probably one of the worst days of my life. I'm a very self-confident person but it crushed me."

Kalhor said he came to Canada to make a better life for himself, but feels stuck. He said the issue will affect more Iranian-Canadians as travel picks up.

"If I want to plan my honeymoon, where should I go? Wherever I'll go, I'll get flagged. Thisis forever," Kalhor said.

"I have zero rights as a Canadian. If other countries put IRGC on their lists, we're doomed."