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Ben Gurion International Airport is one of the world's most
secured airports.
[38] Security operates on several levels.
[39]
All cars, taxis, buses and trucks go through a preliminary security
checkpoint before entering the airport compound. Armed
guards spot-check the vehicles by looking into cars, taxis and boarding buses, exchanging a few words with the driver and passengers. Armed security personnel stationed at the terminal entrances keep a close watch on those who enter the buildings. If someone arouses their suspicion or looks nervous, they may strike up a conversation to further assess the person's intent.
Plainclothes armed personnel patrol the area outside the building, and hidden
surveillance cameras operate at all times.
[40]Inside the building, both uniformed and plainclothes security officers are on constant patrol. Departing passengers are personally questioned by security agents even before arriving at the check-in desk. This interview can last as little as five minutes, or as long as an hour if a passenger is selected for additional screening. Luggage and
body searches may be conducted. After the search, bags are placed through an
X-ray machine before passengers proceed to the check-in counters. Occasionally, if security have assessed a person as a low risk, they will pass them straight through to the check-in desks, bypassing the main x-ray machines.
Until August 2007 there was a system of color codes. The profiler placed colored stickers on the check in luggage: e.g., green stickers for Israeli Jews, red for Gentiles, and dark red for Arabs.
Because the discrimination was too obvious and caused a lot of complaints, it was replaced by a number code: number 1 replaced green and number 6 replaced dark red. (See Haaretz.com Colored tags for Arabs' luggage at Ben Gurion airport discontinued, 07.08.07, Zohar Blumenkrantz,
http://www.haaretz.com/news/colored...e-at-ben-gurion-airport-discontinued-1.227007)
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