Welcome to Our Blog

Today, Aviation Security plays as an important role all over the world. Although modern technologies and counter measures are implemented, threats to Aviation Business are still increasing. Being an International Airline, we should aware aviation security matters. We are warmly welcome to everyone who visit this blog. The objective is not only to develop security culture but also to get good relationship in our airline industry. This blog may contain aviation security news, information and other articles. Please give any advice about our blog.

Thank You!

Standard and Recommended Practices

What is Aviation Security

The Primary objective of international aviation security is to assure the protection and safeguarding of passengers, crew, ground personnel, the general public and facilities of an airport serving international civil aviation against acts of unlawful interference perpetrated on the ground or in flight.


What is acts of unlawful interference?
These are acts or attempted acts such as to jeopardize the safety of civil aviation and air transport, i.e.:

- unlawful seizure of aircraft in flight;
- unlawful seizure of aircraft on the ground;
- hostage-taking on board aircraft or on aerodromes;
- forcible intrusion on board an aircraft, at an airport or on the
premises of an aeronautical facility;
- introduction of board an aircraft or at an airport of a weapon
or hazardous device or material intended for criminal
purposes;
- communication of false information such as to jeopardize the
safety of an aircraft in flight or on the ground, of passengers,
crew, ground personnel or the general public, at an airport or
on the premises of a civil aviation facility.

Friday, February 26, 2010

Airport Worker Charged with Helping Passenger Skip Screening

By news observer

An airport contractor was arrested at Raleigh-Durham International Airport this morning after officers said he illegally used his security badge to help a Delta Air Lines passenger bypass security screening.
“A friend of his was traveling out, and he offered to take [her] onto the concourse, bypassing security,” said Mindy Hamlin, RDU spokeswoman.
“When they stepped onto the concourse, a TSA [Transportation Security Administration] officer saw them immediately and notified an RDU law enforcement officer. And they were arrested and cited.”
RDU Airport police charged Jonathan Carl Gregg, 37, of Garner with disorderly conduct. The passenger, Amy Farrar Farmer, 31, of Apex was charged with second-degree trespassing. Both charges are misdemeanors.
Farmer had been waiting in the security line at Terminal 2 to catch a 6 a.m. Delta flight connecting to New Orleans. Hamlin and Jonathan Allen, a spokesman for the TSA, said Gregg escorted her onto the passenger concourse by using his badge to open a door into a secure area where the public is not allowed to enter.
Farmer was screened after officers arrested her.
“The passenger was taken to the checkpoint, [she was] screened and [she was] negative,” Allen said. “So [she was] found to have nothing on [her] that contained any type of threat.”
The two were not detained. The Federal Bureau of Investigation was notified but had not made any decision about federal changes late today, Hamlin said.
Gregg was employed by Servicetec International, an airport subcontractor, to help operate and maintain the flight information video displays and other technology in Terminal 2. He was stripped of his security badge “and escorted off the property” and will not be allowed to return to work at RDU, she said.
“There was no ill intention here,” Hamlin said. “It was just a bad choice, choosing not to follow the process, and that’s very serious.”
The incident was not regarded as a security threat, and other travelers were not affected, Hamlin said. Farmer caught a later flight.

Weekly News (16 Feb 2010 to 22 Feb 2010)

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC

O
n Wednesday (17/02), the body of a man was seen to fall from the wheel well of an Amerijet B762 cargo aircraft shortly after it departed Santo Domingo Airport (SDQ) for Miami (MIA). Authorities were notified by air traffic controllers who saw the body fall. Operations were suspended for 45 mins, while the body was located. It is not known if the dead man was a member of staff, allowing him access to the maneuvering area, or had breached security to get to the aircraft.


EGYPT

O
n Wednesday (17/02), an anonymous caller claimed that there was a bomb on board an Alitalia A321 preparing to depart Cairo Airport (CAI) for Rome Fiumicino (FCO). Passengers, including the Egyptian Tourism Minister were evacuated, and the aircraft was taken to a remote stand, where it was searched by security forces. Nothing unusual was found. The flight landed at FCO almost four hours late.


INDIA

O
n Tuesday (16/02), it was reported that two British nationals were arrested at the Radisson Hotel near Delhi Airport (DEL). Hotel staff called the Police after the men were seen using aircraft tracking and monitoring equipment in conjunction with a map of DEL. Police later said that no links to terrorist activity had been established after the men had told officials the equipment was being used for plane spotting.


MEXICO

O
n Wednesday (17/02), six countries signed a bilateral agreement on aviation security with Canada and the United States. The agreement at a regional meeting of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) in Mexico City will see Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Panama and the Dominican Republic share more information about passengers, expand the use of biometric data, and improve explosives trace detection capabilities. The eight nations also agreed to enhance passenger screening, circulate details of lost or stolen passports to Interpol, increase the use of APIS, and to share information on detecting false documents, behavior detection and vetting of airport staff.


PAKISTAN

O
n Tuesday (16/02), it was reported that Police at Islamabad (ISB) arrested a male passenger after members of the Airport Security Force discovered a number of bladed weapons concealed inside footwear in his cabin baggage. The pax was due to travel on a PIA flight to Birmingham (BHX). One source claimed that an attempt to hijack the aircraft had been prevented.


UNITED KINGDOM

O
n Sunday (14/02), it was reported that a British Airways B744 operating between London Heathrow (LHR) and Mexico City (MEX) was forced to return to LHR two hours into it’s flight, after a discrepancy was discovered in the APIS data of a US citizen on board. The male pax was offloaded when the flight landed at LHR.


On Tuesday (16/02), Inner London Crown Court heard that the wife of one of the men jailed for his part in the 2006 liquid bomb plot failed to tell police of his plans. Abdulla Ahmed Ali, 28, was jailed for at least 40 years for plotting to blow up aircraft flying to the US. Cossor Ali, 28, denies having information which was of material assistance in preventing her husband committing an act of terrorism. The court heard police found notes which Abdulla Ahmed Ali had made while listening to lectures on jihad, which had his wife's fingerprints on them. The case continues.


UNITED STATES

O
n Sunday (14/02), it was reported that a Pinnacle/Delta Connection CRJ preparing to depart Lansing Airport (LAN) for Detroit (DTW) was forced to return to stand after a male pax on board attempted to open an aircraft door. The aircraft was maneuvering on a taxiway, following a weather delay, when the incident happened. Flight attendants asked several pax to move to the front of the aircraft, including one pax who demanded to sit near the cockpit. The unidentified man was tackled and restrained by his fellow passengers. He was arrested but later released, after it was reported that he had been suffering from a panic attack.


On Monday (15/02), part of Terminal C at Newark Liberty Airport (EWR) was shut down for an hour after security screeners discovered wine bottles in the cabin baggage of a passenger. As a result of the find, the passenger was referred for secondary screening, but ignored the direction, and continued into the restricted area in possession of the prohibited items. Despite an extensive search, the errant pax was not located. It is believed that he boarded his flight and departed EWR.


On Tuesday (16/02), a man appeared in court in Houston in connection with a disruptive passenger incident on a Continental Airlines B767 operating between Amsterdam (AMS) and Houston (IAH) on Saturday 13th. The criminal complaint stated that the man inappropriately touched a female pax seated beside him, and became disruptive when spoken to by the crew. His behaviour led to a member of the FAM team on board breaking cover to sit next to the suspect. The FAM was then assaulted by the male pax, which resulted in his being restrained for the duration of the flight, and arrested when the flight landed at IAH.


On Tuesday (16/02), a passenger preparing to board an Air Wisconsin CRJ preparing to depart Norfolk (ORF) for Philadelphia (PHL) received a text message containing an implied bomb threat. Nothing unusual was found, but the flight was cancelled. All pax were rebooked onto a later flight to PHL. Police at PHL later carried out a search of an Air Wisconsin aircraft which had arrived from ORF. The sender of the text message was later arrested.


On Wednesday (17/02), it was reported that TSA screeners at a number of airports will shortly be provided with a portable trace detection capability which will enable them to carry out random screening of passengers at departure gates and at areas throughout the restricted area. The new programme has been successfully trialled for a period of 17 days at five airports. President Obama’s fiscal year 2011 budget prioritises key investments in aviation security, including $39 million to purchase approximately 800 portable ETD machines.


On Thursday (18/02), a United Airlines B752, operating between Denver (DEN) and San Francisco (SFO) was diverted to Salt Lake City (SLC) after a threatening note was discovered on a beverage cart by a member of cabin crew. The note was given to the pilot who decided that the threat was serious enough to divert the aircraft. The aircraft was directed to a remote stand, where it was evacuated and searched by Police. All baggage was offloaded and searched by explosives detection dogs. Nothing unusual was found.


TSA Weekly Stats (8th - 14th February, 2010)

5
artfully concealed prohibited items found at checkpoints

24 firearms found at checkpoints

22 pax arrested due to suspicious behaviour or fraudulent travel documents

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Austin Plane Crash: Suicide or Terrorism?

Was the suicide plane attack on the Austin, Texas, office building housing the IRS a terrorist act?
U.S. national security officials say the label doesn’t matter, but have highlighted the fact that there are no known connections between the pilot, Andrew Joseph Stack, and international terrorist groups.
Some have criticized the terminology law enforcement officials have used to describe the incident; the terminology appears aimed mostly at reassuring Americans about wider security risks.
Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo said: “I consider this a criminal act by a lone individual.” In the hours after the incident, as TV outlets showed images of the blazing building, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security assured that there wasn’t any “nexus to terrorist activity.” The Federal Bureau of Investigation, the lead investigator, said: “There is nothing discovered so far to indicate a larger conspiracy or international influence.”
Authorities said they recovered two bodies from the building where hundreds of Internal Revenue Service employees worked.
Still, the astonishing incident and the fact that Stack was striking out at the U.S. government begs the question: what makes him different from others classified as terrorists, such as Oklamoha City bomber Timothy McVeigh, or the alleged Christmas Day airline bombing suspect, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab?
In a lengthy manifesto posted on an Internet site, Stack lashed out at IRS, who he blamed for causing him financial problems and declared: “Violence not only is the answer, it is the only answer.”
On jihadist Web sites, Stack’s attack was being celebrated.
Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D., Texas) told reporters that he considered the attack “domestic terrorism.”
Patrick Rowan, former chief of the Justice Department’s national security division, says the classification doesn’t make a difference in the investigation. “It is kind of a silly semantic game to argue about whether or not it is terrorism,” he said.  “It is a version of domestic terrorism. It doesn’t really matter except maybe for agencies keeping statistics.”
The terminology does come into play in the partisan politics of Washington, where Republicans have accused President Barack Obama of being weak on national security.
Some criticized the administration for not classifying Army psychiatrist Maj. Nidal Hasan as a terrorist after he allegedly carried out a mass shooting at the Fort Hood Army base in Texas. The FBI and the Pentagon decided the matter was more appropriately handled by the military judicial system, rather than by terrorism prosecutors.
At a conservative gathering in Washington, D.C., today, the attack was joke fodder. In remarks introducing antitax activist Grover Norquist at the Conservative Political Action Conference, Human Rights editor Jed Babbin quipped that Norquist has been “getting a little testy” recently. “And I was just really, really glad that it was not him identified as flying that airplane into the IRS building.”

Suicide by Plane (New Threat for Aviation)

Thursday, February 18, 2010

al Qaeda Studied Airline Security Prior To Bomb Design

 

February 15, 2010 by Homeland Security News

Leaders of al Qaeda in Yemen claim that they studied airline security in the U.S. and overseas carefully before designing the bomb that Umar Abdulmutallab carried with him on Christmas Day.
In a new publication, according to a translation prepared by terrorism analyst Evan Kohlmann's translators, the group claims it studied x-ray machines, metal detectors, and explosive trace sniffers in considering how to prepare the bomb.
“It becomes clear that every machine has a weakness point that can be undermined,” the article says.
It also says that al Qaeda experts have determined that the detonator in the device did, in fact, go off, consisting of more than four grams of PETN high-explosive material.
“The fuse detonated, and this is what one of the passengers spoke about, that he heard a strong sound onboard the plane,” the article says.
The main charge, it says, was sealed to prevent “hydration,” presumably a reference to the fact that the explosive powder was in a plastic pouch to prevent it from being contaminated by perspiration.
 


Tuesday, February 16, 2010

What is International Standard and Recommended Pratices?

What TSA do                                                                               What we do



                   


                
 
                


                


                

                


 Remark: TSA is Transportation Security Administration of United States.



Weekly News (8 Feb - 15 Feb /2010)

AUSTRALIA

O
n Tuesday (09/02), the Australian Government announced a comprehensive package of measures to strengthen Australia's international and domestic aviation security regime against emerging threats. There will be an immediate increase in the number of passengers who will be subject to explosive trace detection at major international and domestic airports. The Government will provide $17.7 million to increase the number of AFP officers patrolling airports, and will increase the number of Explosive Detection Dogs by 50%. The government also announced a trial, in partnership with the US & UK, on technology-based solutions to assist in further improvements to the detection of liquids-based explosives.  The Government also announced a grant of $54 million to assist in the installation of cargo ETD and x-ray screening technology.


On Thursday (11/02), in response to the government's $200 million to enhancing aviation security, it was reported that of 11 hijack incidents since 1960 involving Australian domestic aircraft, all were by mentally-ill persons acting alone. The report claimed that the Government’s focus should therefore be on securing US-bound flights with a secondary effort concentrated on US carriers headed for non-US destinations.


ESTONIA

O
n Monday (08/02), it was reported that an anonymous caller claimed that there were explosives on board an unspecified flight operated by Estonian Air. Talinn Airport (TLL) was temporarily evacuated, and a decision was made to temporarily suspend company operations at both TLL and Tartu (TAY) while security forces carried out searches of aircraft and terminal buildings. Nothing unusual was found. An Estonian national was charged in connection with the threats. He had been denied boarding on an Estonian flight from TLL to London Gatwick (LGW) earlier in the week. He was subsequently convicted and received a seven month sentence, five of which were suspended. He was also ordered to pay costs of US$10,000 to the airline.


INDIA

O
n Sunday (14/02), a SpiceJet B737 was directed to a remote stand when it landed at Kolkata Airport (CCU) on a flight from Chennai (MAA) after a message claiming that there was a bomb on board was discovered written on a piece of toilet tissue in a restroom. The aircraft was evacuated and searched by CISF officers. All pax and baggage were rescreened, but nothing unusual was found.


JAPAN

O
n Monday (08/02), it was reported that the body of a stowaway was discovered in the landing gear bay of a Delta Airlines B777 that had arrived at Tokyo Narita Airport (NRT) from New York Kennedy (JFK). The aircraft had been towed to a maintenance area, where the body was discovered by engineers carrying out a routine inspection. The male stowaway was described as having a dark complexion, and was dressed in blue jeans and a long-sleeved shirt. He was not carrying a passport or personal belongings. It is thought unlikely that the man stowed away on the JFK-NRT sector, but possibly remained undetected from a previous sector.


NIGERIA

O
n Tuesday (09/02), it was reported that the Government has threatened to withdraw the AOC of any carrier which does not comply with new security regulations at Nigerian airports. The Director-General of the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) said that new body screening equipment would be installed at four of the country’s airports, and that the majority of operators are in compliance with new regulations on safety and security which meet international standards. He added that the country hopes to secure Category 1 certification by the US FAA which would enable Nigerian registered aircraft to fly direct to the US.


TAJIKISTAN

O
n Friday (12/02), it was reported that the former head of Customs at Khudjant Airport (LBD) was convicted of extortion and money laundering, and sent to prison for eight years. The court was told how he accepted a bribe of US$900 from a passenger found in possession of a reported US$700K. The customs chief then facilitated the illegal export of the cash.


UNITED STATES

O
n Wednesday (10/02), a woman was arrested on suspicion of stealing at least 25 bags of luggage valued at more than $11,800 from carousels at Phoenix Sky Harbor Airport (PHX). Sabrina Zotter was suspected of stealing luggage during the past seven months but in an interview with Police claimed she had been stealing bags for the past two years. CCTV footage showed the suspect carrying stolen bags to a rented pick-up truck. ANPR cameras assisted in the identification of the owner.


On Friday (12/02), it was reported that the TSA plans to give more security staff access to better intelligence that could help stop terrorist attacks on planes. The 10,000 staff in line to get classified information are managers, supervisors and "behavior detection officers" who roam airports looking for suspicious persons. The information will give workers details about terrorist tactics, planning, operations and threats. A TSA spokeswoman said that the intelligence would "give context to things they see every day which may otherwise not appear unusual" and let workers "exercise discretion" in dealing with passengers.


On Tuesday (09/02), it was reported that The Fiqh Council of North America has issued an edict stating that airport body scanners violate Islamic rules on modesty. The Council said "It is a violation of clear Islamic teachings that men or women be seen naked by other men and women. The Quran has commanded the believers, both men and women, to cover their private parts." US Airports offer those who prefer not to use the scanners, the option of a hand search. However, the guidelines in the UK do not permit pax to choose their preferred method of screening.


TSA Weekly Stats (25th - 31st January, 2010) - (Apologies - No new stats published)

5
artfully concealed prohibited items found at checkpoints

17 firearms found at checkpoints

21 pax arrested due to suspicious behaviour or fraudulent travel documents

Friday, February 12, 2010

Strengthening Airline Security


11 February 2010

U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano met with members of the International Air Transport Association, or IATA, in Geneva, January 22nd, as part of ongoing U.S. government efforts to work with the airline industry to meet international and U.S. security standards. The IATA represents approximately 230 airlines and more than 90 percent of the world's air traffic.

"Effective aviation security relies on close coordination between airlines, government and law enforcement to identify, deter and disrupt threats," said Secretary Napolitano.

During the meeting in Geneva, which included IATA Chief Executive Officer and Director General Giovanni Bisignani and leaders from approximately 20 airlines from across Europe, Asia, the Middle East and North America – Secretary Napolitano emphasized the airline industry's important role in implementing stronger and more effective international security measures to protect the traveling public.

Secretary Napolitano outlined 4 broad areas for international public-private collaboration that will help bolster efforts to protect the aviation system while facilitating legitimate travel: improving information collection and analysis; increasing information sharing and collaboration in passenger vetting; enhancing international security standards; and deploying new screening technology.

Secretary Napolitano also met with officials from the International Civil Aviation Organization in Geneva to discuss these issues. Her trip began in Toledo, Spain, where she met with her European counterparts to discuss ways to strengthen international aviation security standards.

Earlier in January, Secretary Napolitano dispatched Deputy Secretary Jane Holl Lute, Assistant Secretary for Policy David Heyman and other senior Department of Homeland Security officials to meet with government leaders and major international airport executives in Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle East, Australia and South America to review airport security procedures and work on ways to collectively bolster ways and means of defeating terrorists who target international air travel.

Following the attempted terrorist attack in the United States on December 25, 2009, the U.S. Transportation Security Administration issued a new directive, developed in consultation with law enforcement officials and domestic and international partners, which mandates that every individual flying into the U.S. from anywhere in the world who holds a passport issued by or is traveling from or through nations that are state sponsors of terrorism or other countries of interest undergo enhanced screening.

"I am committed to working closely with the airline industry and my international counterparts," said Secretary Napolitano, "to strengthen global aviation security standards for passengers traveling to the United States and around the world."

Thailand to deport crew of plane carrying weapons

 

From Dan Rivers, CNN
February 11, 2010 8:43 a.m. EST
Bangkok, Thailand (CNN) -- Thai officials will deport and not press charges against the five-member crew of a cargo plane intercepted in the Asian nation last year, carrying tons of weapons from North Korea.
The pilot from Belarus and four crew members from Kazakhstan will not be prosecuted in Thailand, because it isn't in the country's interests to do so, Kayasit Phitsawongprakarn with the Attorney General's office said Thursday.
"We have just acted according to Thai law. The weapons are now evidence. We are waiting for the owners to claim them," Kayasit said. "If after one year no one claims, it will belong to Thailand and the Defence Ministry will decide what to do with them."
The five crew members have been released from prison and temporarily placed in the custody of immigration authorities, said their lawyer, Somsak Saithong.
The men were arrested on December 12 when their Russian-built Ilyushin IL-76 cargo plane was on a refueling stop after flying from North Korea. Thai authorities found the plane loaded with 35 tons of weapons including small arms and rocket propelled grenades, in violation of strict U.N. sanctions against North Korea.
Kayasit said the plane's crew is not being prosecuted, because the U.N. resolution against North Korea only calls on countries to intercept arms, not punish those transporting them.
But Kayasit said he expected that the men will be prosecuted by their own governments.
The final destination for the weapons was still not clear. A leaked report by the Thai government to the U.N. Security Council said there was evidence the plane's final destination was Iran.
Thai officials have not confirmed the report.




Thursday, February 11, 2010

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Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Dead Body Found in Landing Gear of New York to Tokyo Delta Flihgt 59

Originally Published:Monday, February 8th 2010, 9:59 AM
Updated: Monday, February 8th 2010, 10:02 AM

 
A Delta Airlines jet is inspected on the tarmac at Narita international Airport outside Tokyo Sunday after a dead body was discovered in the landing gear bay.


Monday, February 8, 2010

Weekly News (1 Feb - 8 Feb /2010)

ARGENTINA

On Wednesday (03/02), an IED functioned in front of the offices of LAN Chile in Neuquen Province. No-one was injured in the explosion, which caused damage to the front door. Responsibility for the attack was claimed by the Jacinto Arauz Internationalist Insurrection Rebel Brigade, who left a note at the scene stating that LAN had been attacked because it was a symbol of exploitation. The carrier is part-owned by Chilean President-elect Sebastian Pinera.


BAHAMAS

On Friday (05/02), three security officers at Nassau Airport (NAS) were arrested for theft as part of a Police investigation into an alleged scheme targeting outbound Haitian nationals. One of those arrested is accused of stealing nearly $5,000 from one pax, and $2,000 from another. The money is believed to have been contained in envelopes addressed to survivors of the Haitian earthquake. A spokesman for NAS said that security officers have been warned that they have no right to strip someone and count their money. He added that they did not know how many Haitians have complained of being targeted by security officers.


INDIA

On Sunday (07/02), an anonymous caller claimed that there was a suspected terrorist on board an Emirates B773 preparing to depart Mumbai (BOM) for Dubai (DXB). The aircraft had taxied when the call was received, and was directed to a remote stand, where it was evacuated and searched by security forces. All pax were rescreened, and the aircraft departed after a four hour delay. Two pax, seated in a row identified by the caller, were briefly detained by Police, but released a short time later. Nothing unusual was found.


SPAIN

On Friday (05/02), it was reported that four members of the Guardia Civil are being tried in connection with the alleged torture of two members of ETA, suspected to have been responsible for the bomb attack at Madrid's Barajas Airport (MAD) in December 2006. The Public Ministry claims the officers acted 'with emotion' after the murder of two colleagues by ETA several weeks before the MAD attack. The prosecution is calling for sentences of up to three years if the officers are convicted. A further six members of the Guardia Civil are suspected of having 'caused injuries' to the bombing suspects. The two terrorists, who were armed when arrested in 2008, have launched a civil suit against 15 officers, claiming they were beaten and tortured following their arrest.


UNITED KINGDOM

On Sunday (07/02), it was reported that Police are looking for a conman who has scammed his way across European airports for more than eight years. Andrew Gradon is wanted in connection with a fraud which targets sympathetic passengers out of what is estimated to be as much as £15,000 a month. Despite conning scores of gullible victims at airports in at least 12 countries, no one has a photograph of him. Gradon targets pax at airports, telling them he’s just missed his flight. He asks the victim for money to help get him the next flight back to Newcastle, promising to return the money, and giving them a false address and phone number.


UNITED STATES

On Monday (01/02), a Southwest Airlines B737 taxiing for a departure from Philadelphia (PHL) to Raleigh-Durham (RDU) was forced to return to stand, after a telephoned bomb threat was received by an SWA employee. The aircraft was evacuated and taken to a remote stand, where it was searched by Police Officers using explosives detection dogs. Nothing unusual was found, and the aircraft departed 90 minutes late.


On Thursday (04/02), the Federal Aviation Administrator told the House Aviation Subcommittee that a lack of communication between the cabin and the flightdeck prevented the pilots of NW253 from realising the serious nature of what was happening on board the aircraft as it made it’s approach into Detroit (DTW). According to Randy Babbitt’s testimony “the cabin crew reported that they had someone who had attempted to set firecrackers off, so it didn't elevate to anyone -- whether it was the cockpit or air traffic control -- to anything of great seriousness at that point." He added that only when the full circumstances had become clear was the aircraft taken to a remote stand, and "all air carriers in the country" were notified about the situation on Flight 253.


On Thursday (04/02), it was reported that during 2009, the TSA insisted that the operators of Richmond Airport (RIC) issue a security pass to a federal screener with a felony conviction for robbery. The screener who was 17 when he committed the crime, failed to disclose the conviction on his application form. The TSA said juvenile convictions do not bar people from employment. RIC’s security programme prohibits issuing security passes to people convicted of any disqualifying crimes. TSA’s deputy chief counsel told the operators that their screeners are “highly motivated and talented individuals who have come from law enforcement, the military, the business community or out of retirement following 9/11 to make air travel secure for the American people“.


YEMEN

On Tuesday (02/02), a British Foreign Office Minister said that Yemen has yet to upgrade airport security to allow the lifting of a suspension of direct flights to the UK from Sana’a (SAH). Flights operated by Yemenia were suspended in January following alleged Yemeni connections to the failed attack on NW253. The Minister declined to say when direct flights might be resumed, saying only that Britain was helping Yemen to improve security at SAH.


TSA Weekly Stats (25th - 31st January, 2010)

5 artfully concealed prohibited items found at checkpoints

17 firearms found at checkpoints

21 pax arrested due to suspicious behaviour or fraudulent travel documents.

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