Nuovo sistema europeo Entry-exit System dal 12 ottobre 2025

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Son passato da BRU una volta sola, lo scorso Dicembre e ci sono rimasto che arrivando extra-Schengen non c'erano i kiosk ma solo due booth con la polizia di frontiera.

Cioè proprio a BRU, la casa della UE, mi aspettavo il top della tecnologia :D

Bruxelles e' sia la casa dell'UE ma anche la capitale del Belgio :D
 
Le frontiere terrestri sono le peggiori
lì l’app Travel to Europe servirebbe come il pane, e non solo per i cittadini extra-UE ma per tutti, peccato che solo due paesi in tutta l’area Schengen abbiano deciso di integrarla nei loro sistemi…

Una soluzione semplice, già pronta all’uso ma custodita in un cassetto, usata dalle migliori immigration mondiali (frontiere terrestri di Singapore e HK), che ridurrebbe i tempi di attesa del 50% e oltre, aumentando l’accuratezza dei controlli (sai già chi è in arrivo)
 
By Saskia O'Donoghue
Two months after Europe’s new biometric border checks launched, long queues and inconsistent procedures continue to frustrate travellers. Now, a Frontex official has warned that the troubled Entry/Exit System could take up to two years to fully stabilise.


Frontex, a company which helps manage the EU’s external borders, has admitted that the collection of biometric data is one of the main issues causing teething problems with the scheme.
Uku Särekanno, a deputy executive director at Frontex, said that getting fingerprints from non-EU travellers on their first entry to the Schengen Area was “probably the most challenging part” of the rollout.
We expect the situation will stabilise in one or two years because the most challenging part is the first enrolment,” Särekanno said, speaking at an event held by ABTA, a UK-based association of travel agents and tour operators, in London.

He spoke out against the fact that some travellers have been asked to provide fingerprints after their first visits – something not required by EES policies.
“We’re trying to ensure there’s a coherent approach to the border procedures,” Särekanno added. “We’re putting in a lot of effort to ensure practices are harmonised.”

In response to the two-year comment, ABTA chief executive Mark Tanzer called the warning “very painful”.

A significant issue with the rollout has been that individual countries have taken different approaches to its implementation.

Since mid-April this year, EES is supposed to have been in full effect at all borders of the Schengen free movement zone, but there have been lengthy queues at popular tourist destinations, including in Spain, Portugal and France.
Greece had all but suspended the checks for British citizens, but recently scrapped that plan. In late May, the foreign ministry said it had no information that “specific nationalities are temporarily exempt from the relevant procedure.”

Särekanno acknowledged the difference in rollout across the EU, saying it was having a knock-on effect on smoothing out the system.
There are some who are managing it rather well and have dedicated resources for them to follow the processes,” he said. “There are others who are still struggling.”
In what will be bad news for travellers heading into the busy summer season, he added that there are no plans to extend individual countries’ abilities to suspend EES processes in order to ease queues during particularly busy periods.

Nevertheless, the Frontex representative said he hopes that, by September, the kinks will have been ironed out.
2 ANNI?! È FOLLIA! Neanche fossimo nel medioevo, senza la possibilità di sapere (in tempo reale) cosa accade a Madrid, ad Atene o a Parigi.
Frontex dovrebbe segnalare alla Commissione le inadempienze, così che possano sanzionare gli Stati che sono in ritardo, e darsi una mossa.

Perché non aprono un form per i passeggeri e le compagnie aeree, così che possano segnalare tutti i casi di disagio?