India plans facial recognition technology at airports

978

MUMBAI, Oct 4, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Indian flyers will soon be able to leave
their identification cards and boarding passes at home after the government
announced plans Thursday to introduce facial recognition technology at
airports.

The scheme will be rolled out early next year in a bid to help congested
airports deal with rapidly rising passenger numbers, the ministry of civil
aviation said.

Passengers on domestic flights will be able to choose whether they want to
use the biometric authentication system and go paperless, ministry secretary
Rajiv Nayan Choubey said in a statement.

“Security will benefit from the ability of the technology to verify the
passenger at every checkpoint in a non-intrusive way,” Choubey said.

The scheme is similar to plans that Delta Air Lines announced last month
when it said it would launch its first biometric terminal in Atlanta.

British Airways also recently installed biometric technology to identify
customers at airports in New York, Orlando, and Miami.

Under the Indian government’s proposals passengers would have their
identity verified by being photographed at every stage of the check-in
process from entering the airport to proceeding through security and boarding
the plane. The technology will be introduced at Bengaluru and Hyderabad
airports first in February 2019, the statement said.

It will then be installed at airports in Kolkata, Varanasi, Pune and
Vijayawada by April.

But Devesh Agarwal, editor of the Bangalore Aviation website, told AFP
there were questions over whether the scheme had adequate privacy safeguards
for passengers.

“It’s a welcome move but how will the data be stored and what happens to
citizens’ data… if private entities start collecting biometric details?” he
asked.

India has witnessed a six-fold increase in passenger numbers over the past
decade as citizens take advantage of better connectivity and cheaper fares
thanks to a host of low-cost airlines.

But airports are struggling to cope with the surge and analysts have
warned that the government needs to spend billions of dollars to boost
capacity.