Showing posts with label Dutch airport. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dutch airport. Show all posts

Monday, December 28, 2009

Schiphol airport reviews security

What people really care about
( A Security Theater Crap for brains Freedom Technology )
The new machines being proposed for airplane security give results like this:




Never mind What TSA Really Stands For, that almost for certain it can never be effective security, and it costs billions each year that could be spent on something more effective, the response is:

After the machines were introduced at Amsterdam's Schiphol airport last year, officials there said they had few complaints from passengers, saying most approved because lines moved faster.

Source:blog.joehuffman.org/












AMSTERDAM, Netherlands, Dec. 28 (UPI) -- Passenger check-in security is under intense scrutiny after the foiled attempt to blow up a plane en route from Amsterdam to Detroit, Dutch media report.

The failed bomber, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, 23, went through security checks at Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport when he transferred onto Northwest Airlines flight 253, an Airbus A330. A report by Radio Netherlands Worldwide said that Dutch Anti-Terrorism Coordinator Erik Akerboom admitted the airport's security checks are not watertight.

It is not clear whether all transfer passengers are checked by sniffer dogs, the radio report said.

In May 2007 Schiphol became one of the first international airports to introduce the latest body-scanning technology at security checkpoints. Security Scan is a machine that produces an image of body contours using millimeter wave-reflection technology. The image tells security staff whether a passenger is carrying prohibited items on his or her body. Security Scan is also unlike the more familiar Body Scan in which X-rays pass through the body to trace swallowed items.

Dutch members of Parliament are demanding an account of the situation at Schiphol, and the far-right Freedom Party is calling for an emergency debate on the issue.

U.S. authorities have charged Abdulmutallab with bringing explosives on board and attempting to blow up an aircraft. Both charges carry sentences of up to 20 years in prison.

Dutch media are also reporting fulsome praise by readers for Jasper Schuringa, the passenger whose quick thinking averted a major air disaster. He was first to notice something suspicious and made moves to overpower the Nigerian and wrest a burning device from the would-be bomber. Schuringa was later helped by other passengers and flight crew to put handcuffs on the man.

Dutch Deputy Prime Minister Wouter Bos reportedly telephoned Schuringa to thank him for his part in affair.

In the United Kingdom police are searching several London properties linked to the Nigerian, who was an engineering student at University College London between 2005 and 2008, the BBC reports. According to government sources, Abdulmutallab, whose father is a prominent Nigerian banker, was denied a new visa this summer by the U.K. Border Agency after attempting to apply for a course at a bogus college.

His father, Alhaji Umaru Mutallab, said he knew that his son had left London where he was a student to travel, but he did not know where he was going. "I believe he might have been to Yemen, but we are investigating to determine that," a BBC report quoted him as saying. The former minister and chairman of First Bank in Nigeria has been meeting with Nigerian security officials in the capital Abuja.

Police in London have cordoned off a basement apartment and have been conducting searches. Apartments in the area have been sold for upwards of $3 million, the BBC said.

At British airports travelers are undergoing pat-down searches before boarding and being restricted to one item of hand luggage. Several flights bound for the United States from London's main airports, Heathrow and Gatwick, were delayed up to three hours to allow for extra security checks.

Despite the delays, few passengers were complaining, the BBC reported.

Source:upi.com/

Airports step up security


'The extra measures will apply throughout the world on all flights to the United States for an unlimited duration,' the office of the Dutch national coordinator against terrorism (NCTB) said. -- PHOTO: REUTERS

PARIS - WORLD airports stepped up security on Saturday in the wake of an attempt to blow up a US airliner on a flight from Amsterdam to Detroit, authorities said.

'The extra measures will apply throughout the world on all flights to the United States for an unlimited duration,' the office of the Dutch national coordinator against terrorism (NCTB) said.

The NCTB said in a statement that US authorities had asked airlines to take extra security measures. 'It will involve, for example, frisking passengers and extra checks on hand baggage,' NCTB spokesman Judith Sluiter told AFP. The extra measures came into force on Saturday morning in the Netherlands, which received a formal request from the US authorities during the night, she said.

A Nigerian who reportedly claimed to have links with Al-Qaeda tried to detonate an explosive device aboard the plane as started its descent to Detroit on Friday before being overpowered by fellow passengers and crew.

The European Commission in Brussels said on Saturday it was investigating if proper security measures had been followed in Amsterdam, as checks were tightened in other major airports, including Paris, Rome and London.

In London a British Airways spokesman said, 'The United States government has revised its security arrangements for all passengers travelling into the US. 'This includes additional screening of all US-bound passengers and hand luggage before they board their flights. This applies to all carriers. Passengers travelling to the US will only be allowed to carry one item of hand luggage. -- AFP

Source:straitstimes

Suspect passed through Dutch airport


Luggage is transported at Schiphol airport in Amsterdam, Netherlands,
Saturday Dec. 26, 2009.(AP Photo/Evert Elzinga)



Dutch authorities said on Saturday that the man who tried to blow up the intercontinental flight had passed through airport security in Lagos, Nigeria, before boarding a connecting route from the Netherlands.

The Dutch counter-terrorism agency says the suspect, Abdul Mutallab, first got on a KLM plane from Lagos to Amsterdam. He then connected with Northwest Flight 253, owned by Delta Airlines, to Detroit.

In Amsterdam, the would be bomber went through a security checkpoint at Schiphol Airport without a hitch.

The agency says it can't completely rule out the potential for dangerous items to be brought on board. Some objects remain difficult to detect with current security technology, such as metal detectors.

Source:cctv