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Kirpan' should be permitted on planes: New Zealand Sikh MP
Wellington, March 17
New Zealand parliament's
first Sikh MP has called for a legislation to allow carrying of the
kirpan -- a Sikh ceremonial dagger -- while travelling in planes.
National
MP Kanwaljit Singh Bakshi on Tuesday said the legislation should make
clear that the kirpan -- a short dagger that symbolises a Sikh's duty to
come to the defence of those in need -- is not a weapon and is safe to
be worn.
Bakshi said the biggest issue for Sikhs is being able to
wear a kirpan at their workplace and at public events, The Dominion
Post reported.
He said carrying a kirpan at all times is a big deal for Sikhs and sometimes there is a compromise when it comes to flying.
"Some
people are very strict at following the rules and don't fly -- in India
they'll travel by road, they won't fly. There are people who will wear a
symbolic one, a smaller version, which is allowed on airplanes."
He said Sikhs are "sensible" people who would not use a kirpan inappropriately.
The
New Zealand government is considering exempting kirpans from civil
aviation rules, allowing these to be carried on board planes rather than
stowed away with luggage.
Prime Minister John Key addressed the
loosening of the rules around kirpans at a meeting at the Takanini
Gurdwara in Auckland on March 8.
On Saturday, seven Sikh cricket
fans were barred from watching India play Zimbabwe in a Cricket World
Cup match at Eden Park because they were wearing kirpans.
While
Key said the International Cricket Council (ICC) made their own rules
around the tournament, he did sympathise with the Sikh community
regarding kirpans.
When Bakshi became an MP in 2008 he informed
then speaker of the House, Lockwood Smith, that he carried a kirpan and
was given permission to wear it in Parliament.
Bakshi also gets
approval from the Speaker when he has members of the Sikh community
visiting him at Parliament, making them exempt from security rules.
"Kirpans have sometimes become controversial but I haven't seen any Sikh using a kirpan for any harm of anyone else," he said.
Bakshi
has also been pulled up for wearing his kirpan at the airport but has a
small one that meets civil aviation requirements, which he wears to
avoid any problems.
Key said other countries, including Australia
and Britain, had legislated civil aviation exemptions and he was open
to New Zealand doing the same.
He said a wine bottle would pose just as much risk when boarding a plane as a kirpan.