|
Dubai rejects body scans
TRAVELCONSUMERDAILY NEW-technology full-body security scanners will not be used at Dubai airports because they violate local customs and ethics. "I do not feel that it is necessary for us to implement such a technology while we are operating different methods and have different avenues that have worked so far," Dubai Police’s director of airport security Brigadier Ahmed bin Thani told The National newspaper this week. "The use of such a device violates personal privacy and it raises a very sensitive issue for passengers, in addition to the fact that it does not complement our national ethics." The devices, also known as millimetre wave scanners, or backscatter X-rays depending on which technology they use, have raised privacy concerns globally because they allow authorities to see underneath clothing to the surface of the skin, although special software normally masks some parts of the body. The National says a study for the Los Alamos National Laboratory in the US has shown the scanners could also affect human DNA. The rejection by Dubai is at odds with an announcement by United Arab Emirates federal authorities at a regional aviation security conference last month that they intended to introduce body-imaging machines at airports. "We don’t have full information on the side-effects of using this kind of equipment on frequent flyers," he said. Other countries store passengers’ images for only 24 hours before deleting them as a privacy protection. Dubai’s airports are expected to process 46 million passengers this year, compared with 40 million last year, after the opening of Al Maktoum International Airport in Jebel Ali last month. Security personnel have been kept busy, dealing with 732 criminal cases thus far this year, compared to 1382 in all of last year, The National says. Comment on this article |