by Suff » 05 Nov 2015, 22:21
Back in 2000 Mrs S and I flew from Stockholm to Kiruna in the Arctic Circle to visit the Ice Hotel.
I had a card so we went to the lounge. Then, at the right time, we went to the departure lounge. Stood there till called and then gave our ticket and boarded with our hand luggage...
Just one point.
No security. N.O.N.E. We just gave our bag in at the counter, wandered into the departure lounge and handed our tickets over on the way to the plane. I booked so late I could not get the direct flight so we had to stop off at an airport half way up and meet the plane we would have been on. We debarked into a virtually empty airport, picked our bags off the carousel, walked to the gate and dropped our bags off. As there was nothing open, we went into the departure lounge, giving our ticket on the way and waited.
Eventually the plane arrived, some stairs went to the plane and people got off. After a minute or two, the door of the departure lounge opened automatically, not a security person in sight. Open door, plane in front of you, you work it out.....
Needless to say that things changed after 9/11, but there are still places in the world where security is treated in a similar fashion.
Mrs S and I have flown into and out of Buenos Aires, Santiago, Lima and Caracas airports. We have also flown internally in Argentina. We've stayed in Argentina, overnight in Chile and a little while in Caracas. Whilst they all have their own versions of security, they don't really meet what we would call security in the EU.
Terrorists geared up to attack EU and US airports find these places ludicrously easy to penetrate. Whilst I'm sure in these places it's mostly drugs and crime related breaches, that does not mean that terror related events can't happen.
Funnily enough the safest places in the region for you to fly out of will be places like Tel Aviv and Baghdad. Which says a lot about what drives security.
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.