Germany eyes recognition systems at airports

Germany eyes recognition systems at airports

August 22, 2016
Aircraft of German airline Lufthansa standing at the tarmac of the Franz-Josef-Strauss-Airport in Munich, southern Germany, during a strike of pilots, in this file photo. — AFP
Aircraft of German airline Lufthansa standing at the tarmac of the Franz-Josef-Strauss-Airport in Munich, southern Germany, during a strike of pilots, in this file photo. — AFP




BERLIN — Germany’s Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere wants to introduce facial recognition software at train stations and airports to help identify terror suspects following two extremists’ attacks in the country last month.

Speaking to the Bild am Sonntag newspaper, De Maiziere said internet software was able to determine whether persons shown in photographs were celebrities or politicians. “I would like to use this kind of facial recognition technology in video cameras at airports and train stations. Then, if a suspect appears and is recognized, it will show up in the system,” he told the paper.

He said a similar system was already being tested for unattended luggage, which the camera reports after a certain number of minutes. Other countries are also looking at such technology, but Germans have traditionally been skeptical of surveillance due to abuses by the Stasi secret police in East Germany and the Gestapo under the Nazis.

Germans are on edge after militant group Daesh (so-called IS) claimed two attacks in July, one on a train near Wuerzburg and one at a music festival in Ansbach, in which asylum-seekers injured 20 people. As a result, organizers of the Munich’s Oktoberfest have raised security, including banning rucksacks, introducing security checks at all entrances and erecting fencing.

De Maiziere said a ban on rucksacks at large-scale events could also be useful, adding that it would be up to on-site security officials to take that decision. — Reuters


August 22, 2016
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