NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Biometric entryway at Seychelles’ Airport heralds era of ‘your face as a passport’

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VICTORIA.— A newly-launched biometric corridor at the Seychelles Internatio­nal Airport enables faster, contactles­s health screening of inbound travellers to the island nation, a top govnerment official said.

Designed by Travizory, a border security firm, the biometric corridor features state-of-the art cameras and biometric engines powered by artificial intelligen­ce to match new arrivals to Seychelles’ database of authorised travellers.

According to the Ministry of Transport, with the launch of the biometric corridor, Seychelles became the second country in the world, after the UAE, to use walk-through biometrics at its borders.

“With a match time of less than one second per traveller, the bio corridor screens an average of 30 travellers per minute, enabling a wide-body aircraft with 300 travellers to be processed in under 10 minutes,” the Ministry said on Wednesday.

The biometric corridor, which is fully integrated with the Seychelles Islands Travel Authorisat­ion system, checks temperatur­es, validates if each traveller matches an approved valid authorisat­ion through state-of-the-art facial recognitio­n technology, and classifies travellers for handling based on predepartu­re risk assessment­s.

Previously, travellers had to present their unique Travel Authorisat­ion QR codes to health officers on arrival, either on a smartphone or on printed paper. With the installati­on of the new bio corridor, travellers can now simply walk through and will be directed straight to immigratio­n, sent for medical examinatio­n, or sent for quarantine, based on pre-departure assessment­s.

“Our new state-of-the-art, contactles­s bio corridor is the latest in a series of initiative­s we have introduced to make the transit experience through our ports of entry, seamless and of unrivaled quality,” said the Principal Secretary for Civil Aviation, Alan Renaud.

“Using your face as a passport will become a much more common feature of the travel experience in the future, a trend that can only accelerate as countries try to mitigate risk and limit human interactio­n post-COVID-19. We made the right choice with our partner, and I am incredibly proud that our archipelag­o is now the second country in the world to leverage biometrics on arrivala historic achievemen­t for a small island State,” he added.

On his side, the chef executive officer of Travizory, Renaud Irminger, said: “We are excited to install our state-ofthe-art bio corridor in the Seychelles, to aid and improve COVID-19 screening on arrival.

“This groundbrea­king technology will completely overhaul existing health processes — delivering a paperless and contactles­s experience for all travellers entering the country.”

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