U.S. Immigration Inspectors to Be Placed at Foreign Airports
According to GovExec.com,
Commissioner Robert Bonner of the U. S. Customs and Border Protection agency
announced that within the month, the government would send teams of inspectors
to airports abroad to screen visitors coming to the United States.
The initiative originated at the old Immigrations and Naturalization
Service, but was disbanded when the INS and the Homeland Security Department
merged.
A team of seven specially
trained inspectors will be placed within the month at Poland’s Warsaw
International Airport. The primary
mission will be to thwart terrorism, but the team will also perform more
traditional roles such as detecting fake travel documents.
The Customs and Border Protection agency will assess the status of this
project within six months in hopes to expand it to other airports, such as
Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport.
Bonner said that
counterterrorism was not a focus of border and customs agents before the
September 11th terrorist attacks, and the 19 hijackers entered the United States
33 times before 9/11.
Bonner said he hopes other
nations are open to the new program because it is expected to add to overall
security and because it is in the best interest of all airlines that are coming
into the United States. He said the
agency refuses entry into the US every day due to the belief that the prohibited
individuals are associated with terrorism.
The agency is currently trying to decide which airports will be covered
under the new program.
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