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SriLankan helps crackdown on illicit travel through BIA

16 Mar 2016 - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}      

SriLankan Airlines is playing an increasingly important role in the campaign by government agencies to crack down on illicit travel through Colombo’s Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA) with 230 persons with false travel documents being apprehended by the airline in 2015.
SriLankan Airlines employees work closely with other authorities at BIA such as the Sri Lanka Police, Customs and Immigration. The airline has its own group of specially trained document checkers, who have been trained by foreign embassies in spotting fake travel documents.


In the past week, there have been a series of detections made by the SriLankan security. Intense pressure has been built up to minimize and eradicate the organised crime of human trafficking.  
International law authorizes airlines to ensure that passengers travelling between countries do so with all authentic documentation, as required by the airline industry’s global governing bodies such as the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO).


Airlines also face heavy fines from foreign governments if a passenger is detected with forged visa or passport, even if such passengers have been cleared through Immigration authorities at the point of origin. Fines range up to 5,500 euros per passenger (Rs.873,000) in some European countries. SriLankan Airlines saved Rs.130 million in fines from the 230 cases detected last year, apart from the cost of carrying the passenger back to his point of origin, cost of detention rooms at foreign airports, and investigation expenses.


While such fake passengers are likely to use any of the dozens of airlines which operate from BIA, SriLankan Airlines staff play an important role in detecting them on all such airlines, since SriLankan is the sole airport service handler for all airlines at BIA.