Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Airport security get body-worn cameras

- Neha LM Tripathi neha.tripathi@hindustant­imes.com ■

MUMBAI: An unnecessar­y argument with security personnel at the internatio­nal airport over baggage checks or paper work is not just going to cost you time, but will also land you in trouble with clinching evidence captured by body-worn cameras.

The Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) has turned to these cameras as the solution to an unwanted statistic — 15% of the 1,50,000 fliers who pass through the Chhatrapat­i Shivaji Maharaj Internatio­nal Airport (CSMIA) daily get into a tiff with CISF staff.

According to the agency, which manages security at 60 out of the 98 operationa­l airports in the country, these cameras that also record audio will help nail rude or problemati­c fliers and even personnel.

Senior officials said the cameras would also help resolve a dispute that might escalate owing to language barriers between passengers and personnel.

After the success of a trial run, senior CISF officials gave the green light to three such cameras currently used at the internatio­nal airport in the city.

Ten similar cameras, pinned to the shirt pocket, are also being used at terminal 1 of the Indira Gandhi Internatio­nal Airport (IGI), New Delhi.

The body-worn cameras, which are the size of a small mobile phone, have 32 gigabyte (GB) memory.

“We plan to get these cameras at other airports as well,” said a CISF public relations officer (PRO) from Delhi.

A Mumbai CISF official said, “This allows security staff to do their duty as they fear that passengers could level false allegation­s against them.”

A senior airport official said, “The video proof can be used when a passenger complains of a CISF official’s misbehavio­ur on the civil aviation ministry’s online portal or to higher officials.”

D Sudhakara Reddy, president, Air Passengers Associatio­n of India (APAI), said, “Though hidden cameras are widely used at internatio­nal airports, the initiative

by CISF is a good move as it will benefit both passengers as well as officials. Many times, a passenger gets into an argument over some miscommuni­cation.”

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