Tuesday, 23 January 2018

Tougher screening for Middle East cargo flights to US


Cargo flights from five Middle East countries will have to undergo extra security screening when flying to the United States, the US Transportation Security Administration (TSA) said on Monday. Flights originating from Qatar, Jordan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates will have to undergo extra screening. The measure was taken as part of an effort to raise global aviation security, according to TSA.
The programme uses US Department of Homeland Security "threat information and other data to employ a risk-based approach to improve air cargo security through targeted vetting".
Growing concerns about bombs being sent in cargo aircraft were cited by the TSA as the reason of the new rules. The new screenings will focus "on last points of departure locations where the threat is greatest", the administration said.
The six points of departures and its corresponding airlines are:

    Hamad International Airport, Qatar Airways - Doha, Qatar
    Queen Alia International Airport, Royal Jordanian Airlines - Amman, Jordan
    King Abdul-Aziz International Airport, Saudi Airlines - Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
    King Khalid International Airport, Saudia Cargo - Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
    Dubai International Airport, Emirates - Dubai, United Arab Emirates
    Abu Dhabi International Airport, Etihad - Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
    Cairo International Airport, Egypt Air - Cairo, Egypt

All cargo flights originating from these airports will have to adhere to the Air Cargo Advance Screening (ACAS) protocols, which state that carriers must submit data about the origins and sender of the cargo before it gets loaded onto a plane.
The ACAS protocols were already being voluntarily applied by airlines around the world, but the TSA said the new rules will make it mandatory for the flights originating from the seven airports to hand over the information to the US authorities.

Source: Aljazeera

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