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 Tuesday, 31 December, 2002, 09:29 GMT
US orders luggage bomb checks
Sniffer dogs at Washington National Airport, United States.
Sniffer dogs will be replaced by new scanning equipment

The United States Congress has ordered all luggage passing through commercial airports to be checked for explosives.

The new measure comes into force on Wednesday.

It may be one of the most significant new layers of security introduced so far at American airports, and another measure of how things have changed since the 11 September attacks.

Before then, only 5% of the luggage at American airports was screened.

An American Airlines plane sits on the runway after being diverted following an attempt by a passenger to light explosives hidden in his shoes.
Airlines are threatened by bomb attacks
Now, by order of Congress, every one of the more than one billion items checked in by passengers each year must be scanned for explosives.

The cost in new scanning equipment is estimated at over $1.3bn.

Not quite all of America's 429 main commercial airports yet have the equipment.

But the authorities say sniffer dogs, hand searches and checks against passenger lists will fill in the gaps for now.

Some critics say the stop-gap measures are not enough.

There are also concerns that introducing the new screening over the New Year holiday will bring travel chaos.

Again, the authorities believe they have taken precautions.

The new measures will mean longer queues and more delays, but all the signs are that America's travelling public is ready to pay the price.


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10 Dec 02 | Americas
04 Dec 02 | Americas
20 Nov 02 | Americas
02 Jul 02 | Americas
13 Sep 01 | Americas
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