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Passengers at the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport, in Mumbai. Image Credit: ANI

New Delhi: India’s aviation security agency for civil aircraft, Bureau of Civil Aviation Security (BCAS), has said double metal detector checks is a part of the security advisory that has been issued depending upon the threat perception.

The clarification comes after passengers have objected to double or re-metal detector checks by private airlines staff after being checked by aviation security, Central Industry Security Force (CISF).

Passengers have raised concerns about how airlines are handling metal detector re-checking.

Some air travellers commented online saying that at Delhi T-1, passengers were inexplicably being frisked with a metal detector before boarding the bus. “Seems they don’t trust the CISF Security Gate check. Unnecessary and does the airline even have this mandate?” they said.

A top BCAS official told ANI: “Security advisories are issued from time to time due to threat perception and the recent advisory on re-checking of passengers by airlines staffs is part of security advisory,”

“The security agency has advised all private airline companies to conduct re-checking of all passengers except for the North-Eastern (NE) and Jammu and Kashmir (J-K) flight as for NE and J-K mandatory re-checking required,” he added.

The main responsibility of BCAS is to set standards and measures regarding the security of civil flights at international and domestic airports.