Global Airport News

Global Airport News

A botched attempt to blow up a US-bound plane on December 25 probably would not have occurred if new airline security measures had been in place, the Homeland Security Secretary said on Sunday.

Washington has heightened its aviation security since January for travellers coming into the United States after Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab allegedly tried to detonate explosives hidden in his underwear on a flight to Detroit from Amsterdam.

"I believe that (the new measures) would in all likelihood have gotten Abdulmutallab before he got on board his flight to Detroit," Secretary Janet Napolitano said in Nigeria's capital Abuja.

Napolitano was in Africa's most populous country to meet her African counterparts ahead of a regional summit on bolstering global aviation security.

The new security measures replaced the mandatory screening of air travellers from 14 mostly Muslim countries that had angered some allies, including Nigeria, when it was imposed.

"(The measures) are not based on national origin, gender or anything else. It is based on particular passengers that is passed on before they board the plane," she said.

Nigeria said its inclusion on the US list, which included Cuba, Iran and Iraq, could have threatened bilateral ties.

ADDITIONAL SCREENING

The new system announced on April 2 would require US-bound travellers who match information about terrorism suspects, such as a physical description, partial name or travel pattern, to undergo additional screening.

"Aviation security begins before a passenger even gets to an airport," the 52-year-old former Arizona governor said.

"In other words, we are pushing the perimeter out. It is about information collection, it is about information sharing and passenger vetting so you know which passengers may be problematic."

Under this new system, Abdulmutallab would likely have received a second screening before boarding his flight in Amsterdam since he was in a database of about 550,000 people with suspected terrorist links.

The United States is by far Nigeria's largest trade partner, accounting for nearly 45 percent of the OPEC member's exports, mainly crude oil, according to the IMF.