EU refuses to suspend biometric border controls despite 20 problem spots
The European Union has rejected calls from airports and airlines to suspend its new fingerprinting and facial recognition border control system, known as the entry/exit system (EES), even as officials acknowledge 20 “difficult spots” with queue chaos. With one week before the peak summer holiday season, EU officials told travel industry representatives that a full suspension was “not needed” and “not possible.” Airlines and airport representatives, along with the International Air Transport Association (Iata), had demanded a suspension until next summer, citing delays and missed connections in Portugal, Spain, Italy, Greece and Belgium. EU officials argued that suspending the system in some countries but not others could lead to travelers being stranded at border crossings, for instance if a passenger from Britain entered the Schengen zone where controls were operational but left where they were not, risking being registered as overstaying the 90-day travel allowance. The EU reported that out of 1,500 border crossing points, only 20 were “difficult spots,” and it would pressure member states to ease the situation. The system has captured 110 million journeys and refused entry to about 44,500 people, including overstayers and those using false documents.
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Sources: The Guardian
