China Daily

Facial recognitio­n system in Japan to screen foreign visitors

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TOKYO — The Japanese Justice Ministry plans to expand the use of a facial recognitio­n system at Haneda Airport to four other airports.

The system, which currently screens the faces of Japanese nationals returning home, will also be used for foreigners leaving Japan from fiscal 2019. It allows a single immigratio­n officer to oversee multiple stations, freeing other officers to screen foreigners for entry and deal with suspicious persons.

The ministry hopes through the system to strengthen antiterror­ism measures for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

Under the system, the photograph stored on a passport’s IC chip and photos taken at immigratio­n counters are checked by computers to conThree firm whether both photos are of the same person.

Travelers place their passports over an electronic reader and position their faces close to an attached camera. If a match is determined, entry or exit is approved.

Screenings take about 15 seconds, and the system can adapt to age-related changes.

The government began using the system in October for re-entry screenings of Japanese citizens at Haneda. machines handle about 20 percent of all returnees, or about 2,600 people, every day.

This fiscal year, the government plans to start installing a total of 134 more machines at Haneda, Narita, Kansai, Chubu and Fukuoka airports. From next fiscal year, the machines would also be used to screen foreigners leaving the country at the five airports.

In convention­al entry and exit screenings, an immigratio­n officer usually confirms a person’s identity through an interview-style interactio­n.

With facial recognitio­n, one immigratio­n officer could oversee the system on several machines, shortening the time required for screenings.

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