The Daily Telegraph

Airports to open passport e-gates to 10-year-olds

- By Oliver Gill

AIRPORTS will open passport e-gates to passengers as young as 10 years old this summer to speed up queues, the boss of the Border Force has said.

Phil Douglas, the chief executive of Border Force, said that reducing the minimum age for e-gates from 12 to 10 is already being tested at Heathrow, Gatwick and Stansted airports.

If the trials negate fears over an uptick in child smuggling, the rules will be changed at all airports, once the plans are signed off by the Home Secretary.

Mr Douglas said his “aspiration” is for rules to be changed in time for the summer holidays to speed up queues at the border.

Speaking at an airport industry conference in London, Mr Douglas also raised the prospect of passports being scrapped completely in favour of biometric tests on arrival to the UK.

He said: “The technology exists now. But I think the public and ministers will be quite attached to having passports checked for some time.”

His comments came as Mark Harper, the Transport Secretary, sought to soothe industry fears that the emergence of a new vaccine-resistant Covid variant could automatica­lly lead to stringent travel restrictio­ns. Should a new variant emerge, Mr Harper said ministers would take a more “balanced” approach. He added: “I think that lesson has been learnt.”

Hundreds of Border Force officials in the PCS union will strike today in a row over pay.

Strikes by border officials failed to result in chaos at airports over Christmas as hundreds of military personnel stepped into the breach.

Mr Douglas also wrote to airports in advance of the industrial action asking bosses to cap the number of flights at between 70pc and 80pc of prepandemi­c levels.

Similar caps will not be in force today because the walkouts are not taking place during the typically busier school holidays.

Mr Douglas did, however, warn that more industrial action by Border Force is likely to take place in the coming weeks and months.

 ?? ?? Mark Harper , the Transport Secretary, has sought to soothe fears that a new Covid variant could lead to stringent travel restrictio­ns
Mark Harper , the Transport Secretary, has sought to soothe fears that a new Covid variant could lead to stringent travel restrictio­ns

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