UN counter-terror meeting stresses int’l cooperation to ensure safe flights

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UNITED NATIONS, July 8 (APP): The global nature of aviation puts everyone at the same level of risk from potential terrorism, senior United Nations officials said Friday, calling for greater information sharing, resources and political will to keep flights safe.
“Terrorism is not someone else’s problem. States and industry must commit necessary resources and provide necessary governance,” the Secretary-General of the UN International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), Fang Liu, told the opening of a special meeting of the Counter-Terrorism Committee on “terrorist threats to ivil aviation.”
The concept note for the meeting cited recent attacks against
airports in Belgium, Turkey and the United States, and the explosion of
a terrorist bomb aboard Daallo Airlines flight 159, as “stark reminders
that landside attacks, the threat posed by insiders and airport staff,
and the use of increasingly sophisticated improvised explosive devices
are all significant concerns.”
The meeting aimed to give government representatives an opportunity
to discuss enhanced security measures – such as explosive detection and
new cargo rules, as well as new challenges, such as cybercrime and
“porous airport perimeters.”
In her speech, Ms Liu called for greater access to current threat information between states and within the local and federal authorities,
as well as political will to work together.
“Aviation security authorities must be provided adequate information
by the state’s own law enforcement and intelligence organizations, in
order to create a meaningful and effective threat assessment,” Ms Liu
said.
She noted one “pointed” example of information sharing, such as
the recent laptop restrictions imposed by the United States, which were
then transitions to more extensive screening measures of passengers.
In his address, Jean-Paul Laborde, Executive Director of the
UN Counter-Terrorism Committee Executive Directorate (CTED), said,
“more and more strict measures” were clearly needed “to address
challenges of terrorism and to protect our lives.”
But effective work “can only happen through cohesiveness and cooperation, and this is what the Security Council does,” he said,
urging governments to implement measures cited in recent resolutions
related to aviation safety.
Last September, the Security Council unanimously adopted its first resolution to address terrorist threats to civil aviation. Resolution
2309 (2016) urged governments to ensure that effective, risk-based
measures are taken to protect airports, for example, to strengthen
security screening procedures and utilize technology to detect
explosives and other threats.
More recently, Security Council adopted Resolution 2341 (2017),
which recognized the urgent need to ensure reliability and resistance of critical infrastructure.
Laborde stressed the importance of collecting and sharing advance passenger information (API) to detect the departure from, entry into, or transit through their territories of individuals on the Al-Qaeda sanctions list.
He said only 57 countries were capable of implementing and sharing
such information with INTERPOL, which has 68 million entries.
Reiterating the importance of sharing information and cooperation in
his closing remarks, Laborde again spoke about the need to cut red tape
and to implement the Security Council resolutions.
“Along with our hesitations and weaknesses, this is one area where multilateralism has its advantages,” he said.