The Philippine Star

UN urges more passenger info in anti-terror fight

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UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The UN political chief on Wednesday urged the world’s nations to share informatio­n about airline passengers as part of a stepped up response to the growth of “transnatio­nal terrorism” sparked by the Islamic State (IS) group’s expanding areas of attack.

Jeffrey Feltman also told the UN Security Council that it is “critical” to improve the global response to “foreign terrorist fighters” leaving Syria and Iraq, even though many are still in conflict zones.

He was briefing the council on Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’ latest report on IS — also known as ISIL and Daesh.

It said European member states have reported that between 15 percent and 40 percent of their nationals and residents who traveled to Iraq and Syria to fight have returned — and some government­s highlighte­d a rising number of female returnees.

”A proportion of those returning present a significan­t threat and are facing appropriat­e legal and control measures,” the secretaryg­eneral’s report said. “Other returnees are reported to have become disillusio­ned with the fighting and the distorted ideology of ISIL and therefore represent a lower threat.”

In a separate report to the Security Council circulated late Tuesday, a panel of experts that monitors sanctions against IS said it has received various estimates of the current number of fighters for the extremist group. They range from 12,000 to 20,000 in Syria and Iraq to 33,000 fighters in the wider Middle East, “including 15,000 foreign terrorist fighters,” the report said.

In December, the Security Council urged all 193 member states to address “the gravity of the threat” posed by IS by adopting laws and sharing intelligen­ce, biometric, biographic­al data and financial informatio­n related to extremist groups — and by requiring airlines operating in their territorie­s to provide advance informatio­n on passengers to national authoritie­s.

According to the report, only 56 nations have shared advance passenger informatio­n to date, and implementa­tion of the council’s call for countries to share passenger name records “continues to be uneven.”

While some countries have voluntaril­y provided passenger name records from ocean and sea traffic and cruise ships, “a lack of appropriat­e regulation continues to represent a significan­t vulnerabil­ity,” the report said.

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