Times Colonist

EU unveils new security system for travellers

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BRUSSELS — The European Union has unveiled plans for a new system of security checks for travellers permitted to enter Europe without visas in an effort to crack down on extremists.

People from 60 visawaiver countries, including the U.S. and Canada, will have to pay five euros ($7.15) and fill out an online form to obtain clearance to travel within Europe’s 26-nation ID check-free area.

The EU’s security commission­er, Julian King, said that “by spotting problem individual­s and stopping them from coming, we’ll enhance Europe’s internal security.”

The automated system would cross-check travellers against visa, criminal and stolen-document databases. The European Commission says filling out the form should take less than 10 minutes. It will be valid for five years and multiple trips.

The EU’s top migration official, Dimitris Avramopoul­os, said the system will help identify people who “may pose security threats, also irregular migration, or health risks, before they arrive at our borders. It will bridge somehow the existing informatio­n gap by gathering informatio­n that could be vital to national authoritie­s.”

The United States introduced a similar travel authorizat­ion system after the Sept. 11 attacks. In the past, EU officials complained that it was tantamount to reintroduc­ing visas.

But the deadly attacks on Paris and Brussels last year, in which a total of 162 people were killed, have spurred Europe’s own security clampdown.

Plans are also in the pipeline for an entry and exit scheme that would check all travellers, including European citizens, entering or leaving the passport-free area known as Schengen.

The Commission hopes that both this system and the new travel clearance will be up and running in 2020.

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