The UK's privacy watchdog has raised concerns over the use of fingerprinting
for passengers at
Heathrow's
Terminal 5 (T5).
Airport operator BAA plans to take four
biometric fingerprint records and a digital photograph of every passenger who
passes through the £4.3bn terminal - which opens on Thursday (27 March).
The plan aims to improve security by ensuring that the person boarding at the
gate is the same person who checked in and passed through security checks - a
function needed because international and domestic travellers will both use the
same airside facilities.
But a spokesman for the Information Commissioner's Office said the watchdog
was still looking at the privacy implications of the system.
"We have concerns about the routine collection of fingerprint information
from passengers and we will require reassurance from BAA that the data
protection implications of the proposals have been fully addressed," she said.
"We will be weighing up the security benefits of the scheme against the
impact on privacy and asking what other less intrusive alternatives have been
considered."
A similar system already operates in most international airports in the US,
though other UK international airports rely on photographs and not fingerprints
to perform the same checks.
BAA said all data will be encrypted immediately and destroyed within 24
hours, after the passenger has passed through the system.
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