The word "airport race profiling, Osama bin Laden, Middle East Asia, Muslim, 9/11, metal detector, race profiling, hijacking" seems to be well known. Most of us have tried at least one security check at the airport during our lifetime. People feel this is inconvenient or informative for the safety of everyone. However, this security check process is not very useful for a specific target group. Because these groups are Muslims. In this article, focusing mainly on terrorism such as race profiling and countermeasures against terrorism, and the influence these policies have on the target group.
"Terrorism" in Article 3713 of the "Anti-Terrorism Act" is defined as follows. "Terrorism means that the social, secular and economic systems belonging to the organization to change the characteristics of the Republic as defined by the Constitution, its politics, the law, the inseparable correspondence between the State and its territory and state Impair the existence of Turkish state and republic, weaken or destroy or deprive the authority of the state, eliminate fundamental rights and freedoms, impair national and international safety, public order or general health Such fear, intimidation, repression or threat. "
The fear of terrorism has rebuilt the way we live together as a society and made it possible for us to change the law over and over again. In the UK, the new terrorism control law gives the country new power. These include the 2001 anti-terrorism crime security law enshrined just after the 9/11 case, the 2003 criminal justice (international cooperation) law, 2005 anti-terrorism law, other laws and regulations. "Terrorism Countermeasures Law", "2010 Terror Asset Freezing Law", 2011 "Anti-Terrorism and Survey Law", "2012 Free Law of Protection"
Australia has already adopted several counter-terrorism countermeasures. In 2004, a bill including three "anti-terrorism laws" passed in 2004 (No. 2) and (No. 3) was passed. Then Attorney General, Philip Radok, introduced the anti - terrorism bill of 2004 on 31 March. He said that "the bill to strengthen the Australian anti-terrorism method in several ways - after a recent tragic terrorist, this work became even more urgent for the Spanish bombing." Liberated from the legal framework of the scourge of terrorism, the Australian counter-terrorism law "needs to be reviewed and updated as necessary". The Australian Anti-Terrorism Act of 2005 complements the power of early acts. Under Australian law, police can detain suspects for up to two weeks without prosecution and can track suspects electronically for up to one year. The Australian terrorism prevention law in 2005 includes the "shooting and killing" clause.