The National - News

Middle East travellers can forget the paperwork as Britain plans to scrap landing cards

- CLAIRE CORKERY

Passengers from the Middle East to Britain might not have to worry about filling in landing cards on their flights for much longer, after the British government announced plans to scrap the system this year.

Currently visitors and migrants from outside of the European Union must fill in cards before or on arrival at airports and ports, revealing where they are staying in Britain and for how long.

Plans put forward by the Home Office last weekend, designed to cut costs and as well as queues at passport control, would scrap the paper cards in favour of a new digital system.

The proposal has attracted criticism from the British press as well as a former immigratio­n official, who warned that the existing cards were a “useful intelligen­ce tool”.

“It seems the most incredible haste to abandon the system of landing cards,” David Wood, a former director general at the Home Office, told The Times.

“We could access them to find out where someone was staying or where they had stayed if we were carrying out an investigat­ion.”

About 16 million visitors and migrants a year fill in landing cards, a system which was introduced in 1971.

The move is part of a drive to transform Britain’s border controls through increasing the use of digital technology.

Immigratio­n minister Brandon Lewis said on Sunday: “We are modernisin­g border technology to ensure Border Force staff stop dealing with outdated paperwork and can continue to focus on security and protecting the public.”

The Home Office has estimated that updating the system could save up to £2.8million (Dh13.4m) a year in Border Force officer time alone.

If the proposal makes it past the consultati­on period, which is due to end on September 2, the changes would be implemente­d at the beginning of October. But the new system might not be able to provide data on passenger informatio­n until the end of this year.

The Home Office responded to concerns over what impact the proposed change might have on security.

“The withdrawal of landing cards will not result in the loss of any data that is used for security checks,” a spokesman said.

“All passengers arriving from outside the EU will continue to be checked against the variety of police, security and immigratio­n watch lists which are used to verify the identity and confirm the status of every passenger arriving at UK airports.

The withdrawal of landing cards will not result in the loss of any data that is used for security checks

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