NEW DELHI: Aviation minister Ashok Gajapathi Raju today appeared critical of the CISF’s refusal to do away with hand baggage stamping at airports, saying the security must be “non-obtrusive and meaningful” to allow commercial activities.
Stressing on the need to move with the times on security measures, the minister also said in a lighter vein that the best security would be not allowing anyone to come to airports as that would ensure “there will never be a hijack but there won’t be any civil aviation activity either”.
Raju said the “CISF is a police force” and it is the BCAS (Bureau of Civil Aviation Security) that sets aviation security standards that everybody ultimately has to follow.
Raju said “an impractical security thing” can be another problem.
He, however, quickly added that the CISF, which is responsible for security at major airports, would also voice their experiences and it is “better to be safe than to be sorry”.
The BCAS, which comes under the Civil Aviation Ministry, had issued a circular on February 23 to immediately do away with the practice of putting security stamp on the hand baggage tags at seven major airports in the country. (AGENCIES)