Security tightened at major international airports over US bomb fears

Travellers flying to the United States from Europe and the Middle East face tighter security because of new concerns about the development of explosives that could circumvent airport security.

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A man goes through a security check at Paris' Charles de Gaulle international airport (File: Getty)

France has joined other nations in bolstering security at its airports in line with a US request to enhance screening for direct US flights, aviation officials said Friday.
   
The new measures "will be carried out in a way to limit as much as possible inconvenience to passengers, however delays are possible," the DGAC civil aviation authority said in a statement.
   
A DGAC spokesman told AFP that "we cannot divulge the added measures" that are being taken.
   
Officials recommended passengers catching flights to the United States get to the airport early to undergo the additional screening.
  
Charles de Gaulle is one of the world's busiest international hubs, with peak activity now, over the European summer vacation period. Every day, 47 US-bound flights leave the airport, according to the ADP agency managing it.
   
Airports in far-flung French territories such as Tahiti, Martinique and Guadeloupe will also be affected by the new security measures.
   
Britain and Belgium on Thursday announced more rigorous screening at their airports. Passengers going through London's Heathrow airport reported enhanced screening of footwear and electronic items they were carrying into the cabin.
   
US authorities have not publicly given a reason for their alarm, but it comes amid fears that hundreds of Islamist radicals travelling from Europe to fight in the Middle East could pose a security risk on their return.
   
There are also concerns that the extremist group Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) has developed hard-to-detect bombs designed to get past previous airport screening techniques.

 


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