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Home›World›This Day in History | 2003 Britain gives go-ahead for ‘sky marshals’

This Day in History | 2003 Britain gives go-ahead for ‘sky marshals’

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December 28, 2015
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22222Armed undercover “sky marshals” will be placed on some British passenger planes in the United States, the British Government has announced.
Home Secretary David Blunkett and Transport Secretary Alistair Darling said the move was a “responsible and prudent step” in response to the heightened state of alert in the US and would be deployed “where appropriate”.
Last week America raised the national alert to code orange, the second-highest level, after reports that a French airliner would be hijacked and used as a missile against a US city.
The plan, which is part of a general tightening of airport and airline security in the wake of the September 11 attacks, is opposed by the British Airline Pilots Association (Balpa).
Balpa general secretary Jim McAuslan said: “We do not want guns on planes. It is dangerous to have guns on planes and there are other things you can do, like investing in security measures on the ground.”
He said the union would be advising its members not to fly if they were “not comfortable with arrangements”. British Airways and Virgin Atlantic have declined to comment.
The announcement follows a number of security scares involving airports in recent days. Last Wednesday six Air France flights between Paris and Los Angeles were cancelled amid fears of a terrorist attack.
Today’s announcement follows a similar move by the Australian Government two days ago. It said it would place sky marshals on Qantas flights to Singapore. The Israeli airline El-Al, famous for its strict security, has been using armed marshals for more than 30 years. The German airline Lufthansa also has them on some of its flights.
In a separate warning yesterday, the British Government said it believed terrorists could be in the final stages of planning an attack in Saudi Arabia. British nationals have already been warned against all but essential travel to the kingdom following attacks in Riyadh in May and November this year.

Courtesy BBC News
In context

The following day the Bush administration ordered all foreign airlines to deploy armed sky marshals on flights to the US deemed by Washington to be a risk, or face having their flights banned from US air space.
Some EU countries – in particular Italy, Portugal, Denmark, Sweden and Finland – strongly opposed the use of sky marshals, preferring to cancel flights that the US felt were a threat and to concentrate on tightening security at ground level.
After talks in Brussels with EU officials in January 2004, the US softened its stance insisting there was no “blanket policy” to stop airlines without marshals entering America.
In December 2005 a US sky marshal shot dead a man who claimed to have a bomb on board an American Airlines plane. It was the first time since 9/11 that a passenger had been shot by an air marshal.

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