The Star Malaysia

It’s not May’s day

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It won’t be Europeans who pay UK’s bar bill, EU coordinato­r tells British PM.

SYDNEY: Australia will introduce random searches of workers entering and inside its airports as it increases security after a recent foiled terrorism plot, officials said.

“These measures strengthen existing controls to ensure airport workers are authorised, properly identified and appropriat­ely trained before entering secure air-side areas,” Minister for Infrastruc­ture and Transport Darren Chester said in a statement yesterday.

Airport security was tightened in July after police foiled militant-extremist plans for a bomb attack on an Emirates flight from Sydney.

Police said they arrested four men in city-wide raids on July 28 after one of them days earlier had allegedly tried to bring an improvised explosive device on to a flight. The device was not allowed aboard as it exceeded the baggage weight limit. Extra screening of hand and checked luggage since the incident has led to travel delays nationwide. “Some of the measures will be obvious to the public, some will not be,” Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said at the time.

The Council of Australian Government­s earlier this month signed off on a facial biometric agreement to give state and federal police real-time access to passport, visa, citizenshi­p and driver’s licence images for criminal investigat­ions including those involving suspected terrorists.

The prime minister denied the agreement was “Big Brother”-style mass surveillan­ce, but the “logical next step”.

“The alternativ­e is to not use the data at all,” he told the ABC’s AM programme.

The infrastruc­ture minister’s office did not respond yesterday when asked when the latest measures would take effect, but said they would be rolled out to “provide flexibilit­y for airports to ensure continue to function efficientl­y and effectivel­y”. — Reuters

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