Stricter controls after the events in
Paris will change the way people travel around Europe. The corridors for EU
passengers at airports and ports of the Schengen area are closed.
After the recent meeting of the European Ministers of Interior and Justice,
an immediate review of the Schengen Agreement, which provided for the free
movement of persons within EU borders, has been decided as a result.
This means that identity checks will be carried out on all passengers,
whether they are EU or not, resulting in longer waiting times particularly
at airports and ports, in addition to the waiting time at the customs area.
Mario Morcone, the Italian government immigration chief, explained how the
new Schengen Agreement will work: “In ports and airports, the corridor ‘EU
citizens’ will not be available any more, everyone will be screened by the
police. The police will have to consult the available databases and the
queues will be inevitable and in some cases long.”
These measures are combined with the famous PNR, the Passenger Name Record,
a hypothesis that was already advanced by France after the attacks on
Charlie Hebdo in January. All passenger data, including the number of travel
companions, the state of health and methods of payment, will be archived and
accessible by the security forces for a year. According to press sources,
the procedure should be fully implemented by the end of the year.
A register for the passengers is to be shared at the European level, name
tickets for the trains and metal detectors at the stations. In addition,
there will be stricter controls at security gates at the airport, resulting
in longer queues to access the boarding area.
This could be the scenario for travelling in the coming months, whether by
air or rail.
Earlier this year, after the attacks on Charlie Hebdo, the first proposals
concerning the creation of a single register of passengers, the so called
PNR had already appeared in the European Parliament. To this extent then the
hypothesis of name tickets for train passengers was added, a proposal which
emerged during the European summit of Ministers of Transport, following the
attack on the Thalys train to Amsterdam.
In addition, in 2016 the security gates may also disembark at railway
stations, with the City of Light as the first test basin for SNCF.
Now, after the recent events in Paris, the security issue kicks in. And even
with respect to the regularity of the operations and without affecting the
punctuality of services, passengers would have to stick to the more
restrictive rules on the security front.
Increased surveillance, more accurate and time consuming metal detector
controls could therefore characterize the holidays of departing passengers
in the coming weeks, also due to the expected increase in traffic at
airports for departing passengers during the Christmas and New Year holidays
within the Schengen Agreement area.
Finally, in the coming weeks, after the explosion of the Russian jet flying
above the Sinai Peninsula, British and other experts will be sent to analyze
the security protocols of many airports (outside the European Union, the
United States and Israel). Among the countries involved, they should now
land on Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines, then to Kenya, after the
checks carried out on the airports in North Africa and the Middle East.