The terrorist attack in Istanbul Ataturk airport that left scores of people dead and several others injured has jolted airport authorities around the globe.
Consequently, the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) has enhanced security measures, passenger facilitation at all airports.
The agency disclosed that it has also enhanced by the installation of more modern and bigger conveyor belts and metal walk-through detectors
The authority equally advised all airport users, especially passengers and airline operators, to be security conscious at airports, following the spate of recent security breaches, including bomb blasts, at some airports around the world.
Spokesman
for the agency, Yakubu Dati advised passengers not to accept any luggage from
anyone and to report any suspicious movements or behaviour immediately to
Aviation Security Personnel in the terminals.
He said on its part, the authority
has put adequate security measures in place at all Nigerian airports, to
forestall any form of security breach, including the installation of 3D
screening machines, metal detectors and CCTV cameras.
Dati noted that apart from the
statutory security and safety measures already in place at the airports,
sniffer dogs and members of the Bomb Detection Unit of the Nigerian Police
Force have also been deployed at the airports, to complement the effort of our
Aviation Security personnel at the security screening points.
His
words, “Inspite of these heightened security measures, passenger
facilitation at all our airports has also been enhanced by the installation of
more modern and bigger conveyor belts and metal walk-through detectors. Airport
terminals have also been expanded and modernised to provide better ambience and
more space for passenger comfort.”
Experts have called for a
worldwide rethink on airport security following the suicide bombings at
Istanbul's Ataturk International Airport.
The
demands reflect the increased likelihood of terror attacks throughout Europe,
with seven countries across the continent considered 'high risk' by the British
Foreign and Commonwealth Office, as a new map highlighting the differing levels
of threat reveals.
Indeed,
the terror attack in Turkey hit one day after the US State Department issued a
travel warning to American citizens about the increased terror threat in the
Turkey - and to avoid the south of the country altogether.
The
current threat level in Turkey is currently classified as an emergency
alert.
And at
the beginning of June, the State Department issued a Europe-wide travel alert,
specifically concerning the European Soccer Championship currently underway in
France and for the Catholic Church's World Youth day in Poland this July.
Ataturk
reopened for flights and departures just hours after three suicide bombers
killed up to 50 people and wounded 147 yesterday evening, but the incident has
highlighted how international airports are now seen as 'soft targets' for ISIS.
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