Interpol passport system for AirAsia

A ground crew man walks past a fleet of AirAsia's passenger jets on the tarmac of the new low cost terminal KLIA2 in Sepang, Malaysia, Friday, May 9, 2014. AirAsia on Friday began its full operations from KLIA2. (AP Photo/Joshua Paul)

A ground crew man walks past a fleet of AirAsia's passenger jets on the tarmac of the new low cost terminal KLIA2 in Sepang, Malaysia, Friday, May 9, 2014. AirAsia on Friday began its full operations from KLIA2. (AP Photo/Joshua Paul)

Published May 13, 2014

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Kuala Lumpur - Top Asian budget carrier AirAsia said Tuesday it will become the world's first airline to check the passports of all its passengers against Interpol's global database of 42 million stolen or lost travel documents by end of this month.

The disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 two months ago revealed a gaping loophole in aviation security when two passengers were found to have boarded the plane with stolen passports. Interpol said it had information on the theft of the passports but authorities hadn't checked its database.

AirAsia, which is also based in Malaysia, said it will use Interpol's “I-Checkit” system to screen passports when passengers check in. This will be done for its 600 daily international flights using 100 airports across the region, it said.

“AirAsia has established the new standard for airline security,” it quoted Interpol Secretary General Ronald K. Noble as saying. “This will raise the bar across the industry for passenger safety and security.”

AirAsia said no personal data will be transmitted to Interpol other than passport numbers and issuing nation. If there is a positive match against the database, local authorities and Interpol will be notified, it said.

Less than 10 countries do systematic screening of travel documents against the Interpol database. More than 1 billion times last year, travelers boarded planes without their passports being checked against the database, the international police organization says.

“Airlines will no longer have to depend solely on countries screening passports to keep passengers safe from terrorists and other criminals who use stolen passports to board flights. Like AirAsia, they will be able to do it themselves as well,” Noble said.

Malaysian police determined that the two men traveling with stolen passports on Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 were Iranians seeking to migrate illegally to Europe and were not terrorists.

The Boeing 777 with 239 people on board was traveling to Beijing from Kuala Lumpur on March 8 when it disappeared. Malaysia's government said the plane's last position was in the middle of the Indian Ocean, west of Perth, Australia. It has not been found.

Sapa-AP

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