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To upgrade security, Indira Gandhi International Airport may soon introduce full body scanner

Security Has Always Been A Major Concern At IGI Airport At A Full Body Scanner Will Be Made Operational At The Venue By November End.

PTI | Updated on: 06 Nov 2016, 06:48:44 PM
A full body scanner will be made operational at IGI airport by the end of November (Image Source: Getty)

New Delhi:

In order to increase security and counter-terror measures at the Indira Gandhi International Airport, a full-body scanner is set to be made operational here by the end of November. 

IGI airport is one of the most sensitive installations areas in the country and this decision was undertaken after huge deliberations.

This is for the first time such a scanner, till now opposed over privacy concerns, will be installed and made operational for a trial at any civil airport in the country, officials said.

The scanner, procured from a German firm, works on the Millimetre Wave (MMW) Technology which does not give out the exact body contours of a flier under inspection at the scanner but puts out a 'generic mannequin' figure depicting only metallic and non-metallic objects on an individual's body, they said.

The scanner, they said, works by way of 'targeted search' and looks out for prohibited items that can be concealed in the body like liquid gels, plastic items, ceramics, cutters, recording devices and metallic and non-metallic items like knives and other weapons.

It is expected that the scanner will be made operational from November-end on trial basis at IGI's domestic terminal 1D for fliers on voluntary basis.

The officials said that while some airport staff had already been put under training to work on the scanner, the most important part of training of Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) personnel will begin from Monday and about 50 master trainers of the force will be skilled on the machine.

They said the machine scans a person in few seconds when he or she stands in stationary position at the designated spot inside a box, which is connected to a monitor, and analysed by a trained CISF personnel.

In case, there is some suspicion about a flier, he or she will made to undergo full body frisking, also called pat down search, by a CISF official, else they can just walk out of the scanning box to catch their flight, they said.

The manufacturers of the machine claim that the rays emitted from the scanner are less harmful than X-rays as they do not penetrate through the body.

"All these features are subject to the trial after which a final call will be taken about the new scanner," they said.

The machine can handle around 250-300 fliers in an hour and its operating system and software can be tuned as per the requirements of Indian security protocols, they said.

The machines are being used by some European airports and have been found to be successful in scanning the fliers there.

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First Published : 06 Nov 2016, 06:33:00 PM

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