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Passengers to have security interview at airport for US visit

Oct. 17, 2017 - 10:17 By Yonhap
All passengers bound for the United States will be required to undergo a security interview at airports in their countries amid growing concerns about terrorist attacks, the transport ministry said Tuesday.

On June 28, the US Transportation Security Administration  asked airlines across the world to carry out a thorough security check of passengers bound for the US through interviews and screening, the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport said in a statement.

"Local passengers who travel to the US using low-cost carriers are subject to a security interview at the airlines' ticket desks from Oct. 26," a ministry official said over the phone. Domestic low-cost carriers currently operate flights to the US territories of Guam and Saipan.  

South Korean passenger jets await passengers at Incheon International Airport. (Yonhap)

But full-service carriers such as Korean Air Lines Co. and Asiana Airlines Inc. have asked TSA to delay the implementation of a security interview until the No. 2 terminal at the Incheon International Airport is completed in January next year, the official said.

"The airlines asked for the delay as it takes time for them to make preparations for the security checks," he said, adding Korean Air is scheduled to move to the No. 2 terminal and Asiana will remain in the existing No. 1 terminal. 

TSA called on some 250 airlines to apply for a delay in the implementation and give the reasons for the delay request by Oct. 19, he said.

At the US' request, full-service and low-cost carriers already began to carry out additional screenings of portable electronic equipment such as notebooks and smartphones before boarding gates from July 19, the statement said.

"The security interview also applies to passengers who travel to the US via Incheon International Airport. Airline staff will ask if passengers are carrying baggage that they may be carrying on behalf of someone else and whether or not they have booked a one way ticket instead of the more common two-way reservation," the official said.  (Yonhap)