Interpol urges airlines to create passport database

Interpol urged the world’s airlines to establish a passport database to help prevent terror attacks similar to the September 11, 2001 airline hijackings that targeted the US. Many terrorists travel on fake documents and a database would make it easier...

Interpol urged the world’s airlines to establish a passport database to help prevent terror attacks similar to the September 11, 2001 airline hijackings that targeted the US.

Many terrorists travel on fake documents and a database would make it easier to detect stolen or fraudulent passports, the head of the cross-border crime-fighting agency told an aviation conference in Singapore.

“It would have prevented the first World Trade Centre bombing,” Interpol Secretary General Ronald Noble said, noting that one of the attackers had entered the US with a stolen passport.

“There are many, many, many cases with people travelling internationally that get trained as terrorists using false identity documents, so it would definitely prevent terrorist activity,” he added.

Interpol – which stands for the International Criminal police Organisation – has 188 member countries and facilitates cross-border police cooperation against international crime.

Mr Noble said terrorists often travel to countries such as Afghanistan and Pakistan to receive bomb-making and weapons training.

“You must have a database that integrates information from travellers around the world,” Mr Noble said.

“It would be so easy to put the numbers from stolen passports in that database and make sure that the other 500 million passengers have their passports screened.”

But he warned that there was a reluctance among airlines to share customer information, helping to leave gaps in the screening system.

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