FB pixel

Biometric passports and borders essential to prevent use of stolen passports: SIBA

 

Following news reports that stolen Austrian and Italian passports were used to book two airline tickets on the disappeared Malaysian Airlines Flight 370, the newly-formed Secure Identity & Biometrics Association has released a statement arguing that the need for full and immediate implementation of biometric passports and borders, including a biometric exit program in the United States.

“Fully biometric passports and readers can prevent stolen passport holders from successfully bypassing immigration authorities,” Janice Kephart, founder of the Secure Identity & Biometrics Association (SIBA) and former 9/11 Commission border counsel said. “Moreover, biometric borders are now cost-effective, extremely fast, and are currently enabling countries like New Zealand to incorporate airline check-in with immigration check-out, building seamless convenience for the traveler and safer skies.”

Kephart, who drafted identity-related recommendations in the 9/11 Final Report as a border counsel to the 9/11 Commission, is founder and CEO of SIBA.

Reported previously in BiometricUpdate.com, SIBA was formed to provide proactive education, policy refinement and solutions to the complexities of balancing identity security and protection with national security, public safety, economic strength and innovation.

The following is a direct excerpt from SIBA’s statement posted March 10, 2014.

Identity assumption remains possible where passports do not meet the international standards requiring inclusion of a biometric, or a country fails to implement processes to read biometrics. Today, the United States and countries around the world, including Austria, Italy and Malaysia, issue e-passports that meet international security standards. However, where countries fail to embed biometric readers into border processes at both entry and exit, the likelihood of success for a stolen passport to be used for purchase and check-in of an international flight increases substantially.

The 9/11 Commission border team concluded that the 9/11 terrorists had engaged in a specific terrorist travel operation. In other words, not only did the four nearly simultaneous hijackings of four commercial airplanes constitute a coordinated operation, but so did the hijackers’ travel. This coordinated operation was dubbed “terrorist travel.” The Commission stated:

Terrorists must travel clandestinely to meet, train, plan, case targets, and gain access to attack. To them, international travel presents great danger, because they must surface to pass through regulated channels, present themselves to border security officials, or attempt to circumvent inspection points. In their travels, terrorists use evasive methods, such as altered and counterfeit passports and visas, and immigration and identity fraud. These can sometimes be detected. See 9/11 Commission Final Report at p. 384.

Anyone planning clandestine travel understands the importance of success and consequences of detection. In the case of Malaysia, it was viewed by Osama bin Laden as an “excellent” venue for meetings because Muslims could enter without a visa, including those with Saudi and Gulf passports. See 9/11 Commission Final Report at pp. 59-60.

The investigation into the disappearance of the Malaysian flight calls for a conclusive answer as to the ticket-holders’ identities, and conclusive information on whether these individuals boarded. What remains clear and unmistakable is that these individuals should never have been able to use the stolen passports to gain access to international travel at all.

Article Topics

 |   | 

Latest Biometrics News

 

G7 digital identity lingo aligned, technical standards not so much

An attempt to match the digital identity systems of some of the world’s richest countries against each other shows a…

 

Report: Synthetic identity fraud is growing

A new U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) report on its recent audit of the US Social Security Administration’s (SSA) Electronic…

 

Biometric sensors for road safety launched by Infineon, Rheinmetall Dermalog

Infineon Technologies and Rheinmetall Dermalog Sensortec have each introduced biometric identification and authentication tools, one based on fingerprints and other…

 

New tools, Authenticate presentations coax hesitant businesses to adopt passkeys

The FIDO Alliance has launched a pair of tools at its Authenticate 2024 event online and in Carlsbad, California, Passkey…

 

How to get passkeys working for a billion Microsoft users and beyond

The FIDO Alliance has kicked off the Authenticate 2024 conference with a campaign urging people to “free yourself with passkeys,”…

 

French regulator releases technical reference on age verification for porn

France’s Regulatory Authority for Audiovisual and Digital Communication, Arcom, has published its Technical Reference on Age Verification for the Protection…

Comments

9 Replies to “Biometric passports and borders essential to prevent use of stolen passports: SIBA”

  1. This is probably the kick along we needed to get a few things sorted out here. After all, isn’t that what passport control is all about? Obviously, not so much in Asia – even though they have outbound passport controls. Not sure how Canada and the US will respond – they don’t even have outbound passport controls. And rely of airline manifests in a delayed dodgy process. Land border exits? forget it. Gaping holes right there. The only answer is real-time biometric passport controls – that check everything – for incoming and outgoing passengers and any port.

  2. Interpol maintains the list of stolen passport numbers.In this case it would have been enough if either the airline or the border control had actually checked the passport numbers against this list.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Most Read This Week

Featured Company

Biometrics Insight, Opinion

Digital ID In-Depth

Biometrics White Papers

Biometrics Events