In March, U.S. officials imposed restrictions on passengers carrying laptops and other large electronic gear in cabins on nine airlines, most of which were Middle Eastern carriers, to address the potential threat of hidden explosives.
Last month, U.S. officials announced new security requirements for all airlines rather than an expansion of the laptop ban and have been dropping the restrictions from airlines as they boosted security.
A TSA spokesman said the U.S. government had lifted the restrictions at Saudi Arabian Airlines' main hub in Jeddah at King Abdulaziz International Airport on Monday. U.S. government officials will visit Riyadh's King Khalid International Airport "later this week to confirm compliance there as well," spokesman James Gregory said.
On Thursday, the U.S. Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) issued a revised directive to airlines around the world
in response to requests that it clarify aviation security measures
scheduled to begin taking effect later this week.
An
airline official briefed on the matter said the directive gave airlines
more flexibility and additional time to obtain explosive trace
detection equipment. The official was not authorized to discuss
sensitive security issues with the media and requested anonymity.
The
directive includes technical adjustments, agency officials said,
declining to release the text. European airlines have been pushing for
changes to meet the new requirements.
DHS has said that it could impose new restrictions on laptops if airlines do not make security upgrades.
European
and U.S. officials told Reuters that airlines have until July 19, to
put in place increased explosive trace detection screening and other
measures and 120 days to comply with other security measures, including
enhanced screening of airline passengers.
The
new requirements include enhanced passenger screening at foreign
airports, increased security protocols around aircraft and in passenger
areas and expanded canine screening. They affect 325,000 airline
passengers on about 2,000 commercial flights arriving daily in the
United States, on 180 airlines from 280 airports in 105 countries.
A
group of airline groups, including the International Air Transport
Association, criticized the new requirements in a July 14 letter to U.S.
officials saying it is a "fundamental shift away from the risk-based
approach" and said it would be "extremely difficult" to "meet the
deadlines because of the lack of availability of screening equipment
technology and resources."
TSA spokeswoman Lisa
Farbstein defended the new security requirements unveiled in June that
were aimed at avoiding expansion of the laptop ban. She said the agency
has been working with airlines for months to keep them informed on
security issues.
"As we look to stay ahead of the evolving
threats, we’ll be working with global aviation stakeholders to expand
security measures even further," she said in an email, adding the
government has "seen a web of threats to commercial aviation." Source:http://www.reuters.com
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