nsane.forums Posted February 1, 2010 Share Posted February 1, 2010 Passengers who refuse will not be allowed to board their flight Transport secretary Lord Adonis has confirmed that airport body scans will be compulsory for passengers selected to undergo the procedure. Travellers who refuse will not be allowed to fly. "In the immediate future, only a small proportion of airline passengers will be selected for scanning. If a passenger is selected for scanning and declines, they will not be permitted to fly," he said. Heathrow and Manchester airports started using the scanners today, and others, including Birmingham, are set to follow later this month. A public consultation on the use of the controversial technology, which produces effectively naked images, will follow. "The Department for Transport has introduced an Interim Code of Practice covering privacy, health and safety, data protection and equality issues," said Lord Adonis in a statement. "The Code will require airports to undertake scanning sensitively, having regard to the rights of passengers. Given the current security threat level, the government believes it essential to start introducing scanners immediately. "However, I wish to consult widely on the long-term regime for their use, taking full account of the experience of the initial deployment." Alex Deane, director of privacy news site Big Brother Watch, said: "What kind of a free society does the government think it is 'protecting' when it invades our privacy like this? "When we are forced to expose ourselves at the airport in order to go on holiday, the terrorists have won." Last week, Interpol chief Ronald Noble was reported as questioning the money and resources being ploughed into body scanners. He argued that better intelligence and information sharing between countries would better serve anti-terrorist efforts. View: Original Article Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Archived
This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.