Three thermal scanners were handed over to the Airports Authority of T&T (AATT) to assist in detecting suspected cases of Ebola entering Trinidad and Tobago. The scanners were purchased from a US firm at a total cost of TT$387,000, said chief executive officer of the Office of Disaster Preparedness and Management (ODPM), Dr Stephen Ramroop, speaking at a handing over ceremony at the VIP Lounge, Piarco International Airport, yesterday.
As part of a wider detection system, the scanners will be used at the Piarco and ANR Robinson International airports. Ramroop said collaborative efforts with strategic partners such as the AATT would enhance T&T’s border security. AATT Chairman Jason Julien said the scanners were not just for Ebola detection but to ensure tighter border control.
“It is not just about the Ebola virus,” Julien said, adding that the scanners would be used to identify “any threat to the border security of T&T that may have or be related to a weapon or otherwise that could be picked up by a heat signature.” Ramroop and Julien said people would not be singled out or approached by officials and ordered to participate in the detection process.
They said the scanners would be positioned to scan arriving passengers, rather than a specific person—as body temperatures beyond 37 degrees Celsius would trigger off the computerised alarm system. Only then would passengers be taken to the port health officer for further tests. Julien declined to say exactly where the scanners would be located, for security reasons. “We have to be careful how we advertise the protections we have,” he said.
Staff responsible for border access and security would be trained in the use of the equipment and software, Julien said. The AATT was working with the ODPM to facilitate drills and table-top exercises, test emergency response mechanisms and introduce protocols.
Asked how soon the scanners would be introduced into daily operations at both airports, Julien said: “The reality is that we are going to implement it as soon as possible. The reason why we have this here now is before the peak of the Christmas travel season and because of the expected influx of passengers.”