Airport searches go too far - survey

A passenger waits for his turn at the security checkpoint at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

A passenger waits for his turn at the security checkpoint at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

Published Nov 24, 2010

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Washington - Half of Americans say the enhanced passenger security patdowns at US airports go too far, according to a poll published on Tuesday just before the busy Thanksgiving holiday travel season.

But nearly two-thirds of those surveyed in the Washington Post-ABC News poll support the new full-body security-screening machines at the airports, as most say they put higher priority on preventing terrorism than protecting personal privacy.

The poll found that 50 percent said the new patdown searches were unjustified, while 48 percent supported them and two percent had no opinion.

The recently adopted screening methods that have drawn complaints from passengers and lawmakers in Congress rely on highly revealing full-body imaging scanners and physical patdowns for travellers who choose to opt out of the scans.

Airlines expect 24 million people to travel over the US Thanksgiving holidays. Airlines say they have passed along passenger concerns to the Transportation Security Administration, the agency responsible for the new procedures.

John Pistole, the head of the agency, has sought to blunt mounting criticism over intrusive body searches and has said US authorities will reconsider the screening procedures - but he does not expect immediate changes.

TSA estimates that fewer than two percent of the two million passengers screened daily, or 40 000, are given the patdowns.

With pilots allowed to carry guns and cockpits secured against hijacking threats after the 2001 hijack attacks on New York and Washington, screening in recent years has focused on sophisticated explosives that are hard to detect.

Authorities last month thwarted the bombing of US-bound air cargo flights. A year ago, a passenger tried to set off explosives in his underwear while on a flight to Detroit on Christmas Day. The Yemen-based group Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula claimed responsibility for both plots. - Reuters

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