No Porno At Lagos Airport —FAAN
Following media reports that security officers in charge of the full-body screening machines at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, MMIA, Ikeja, Lagos, South West Nigeria, now engage in lewd behaviours while screening passengers, airport authorities yesterday said that the reports are untrue.
“There is no case of pornography at the Lagos airport as some people are suggesting,†the General Manager of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), Mr. Akin Olukunle, told P.M.NEWS during an interview yesterday.
“Some senior security officers who are university graduates were trained on how to handle the screening machines and I don’t think they will be carried away by the naked bodies of women,†he said.
Reports had alleged that security officers in charge of the 3-D screening machines, as the gadgets are known, now enjoy watching naked passengers, especially female air travellers during screening.
The reports alleged that even officers who are not on duty now spend more time at the scanning room just to watch passengers naked.
It said that when passengers exit the scanning point, officers talk about the shape of the travellers.
“The machine is configured in such a way that only the blurred image of the person being scanned would show on the screen, without revealing his or her face.
“It is also designed to wipe off such image in a few seconds if nothing incriminating is found on him. The image of the person being scanned can also not be saved on the system.
“It is also pertinent to point out that in using 3-D scanning machine, health, culture, human rights and religion were put into consideration so that none of these factors is violated in the process. Anyone who does not like to undergo 3-D scanning citing any of these factors would be given the option of private physical screening by security officers.
“At the Murtala Muhammed Airport, the configuration of the screening area and the location of the monitor is such that the two areas are far apart and entirely secluded from private view. The time frame involved in the scanning process does not make it possible for the monitoring officer to scan and at the same time come out to identify the person accessing the 3-D full body scanner,†Olukunle said in a statement.
The Director General of the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority, NCAA, Dr. Harold Olusegun Demuren, had in a previous statement described the reports as false and self-contradictory.
The introduction of the body scanner followed the Northwest incident of 25 December 2009 when a Nigerian allegedly attempted to blow up a plane with hundreds of passengers on board wearing underwear devices.
Meanwhile, Olukunle disclosed that apart from Lagos international airport that boasts of two full body scanners and the Abuja International Airport that has only one scanner, Port Harcourt and Kano international airports have none.
A passenger who avoids Lagos and Abuja can travel safely at Port Harcourt and Kano airports with hidden devices undetected.
—Simon Ateba
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