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Friday, April 4, 2025

New high-tech scanners to boost port security

by

Dareece Polo
37 days ago
20250226
Minister of Finance Colm Imbert walks past the newly commissioned mobile port container scanners during the ceremony hosted by the Port Authority of T&T and the Ministry of Works and Transport yesterday.

Minister of Finance Colm Imbert walks past the newly commissioned mobile port container scanners during the ceremony hosted by the Port Authority of T&T and the Ministry of Works and Transport yesterday.

ROGER JACOB

Se­nior Re­porter

da­reece.po­lo@guardian.co.tt

Two out of four new­ly ac­quired Smiths De­tec­tion heavy com­mer­cial ve­hi­cle scan­ners have of­fi­cial­ly been in­tro­duced to im­prove ef­fi­cien­cy and se­cu­ri­ty at the na­tion’s ports. The com­mis­sion­ing cer­e­mo­ny oc­curred yes­ter­day at the Port of Port-of-Spain, with the re­main­ing two set to be in­stalled at the Port of Point Lisas.

Fi­nance Min­is­ter Colm Im­bert led the rib­bon-cut­ting cer­e­mo­ny, joined by Works and Trans­port Min­is­ter Ro­han Sinanan, Port Au­thor­i­ty chair­man Lyle Alexan­der, and act­ing Comp­trol­ler of the Cus­toms and Ex­cise Di­vi­sion, Ri­ad Ju­man.

Ac­cord­ing to Im­bert, the scan­ners, which cost of US$12.9 mil­lion (TT$87 mil­lion), will en­hance the de­tec­tion of il­le­gal con­tra­band, nar­cotics, and weapons.

He said the new scan­ners sig­nif­i­cant­ly im­prove ef­fi­cien­cy, pro­cess­ing up to 25 con­tain­ers per hour, com­pared to the pre­vi­ous fixed scan­ner, which could han­dle on­ly 60 con­tain­ers per day.

“These x-ray screen­ing sys­tems are de­signed for ease of op­er­a­tion and, at full ca­pac­i­ty, can scan up to 25 con­tain­er trucks per hour in mo­bile scan­ning mode and up to 100 trucks per hour in pass-through mode,” Im­bert said.

The scan­ners should fa­cil­i­tate rapid threat iden­ti­fi­ca­tion with­out man­u­al in­spec­tions, bet­ter sup­port trade, pro­vide re­al-time analy­sis, and of­fer flex­i­ble de­ploy­ment due to their mo­bil­i­ty.

Im­bert al­so high­light­ed the scan­ner’s high pen­e­tra­tion ca­pa­bil­i­ty, not­ing that it can scan through 300 mil­lime­tres (12 inch­es) of steel, dis­tin­guish­ing or­gan­ic and in­or­gan­ic ma­te­ri­als with ad­justable scan­ning heights, an­gles, and mul­ti­ple scan­ning modes.

While Sinanan stat­ed the Gov­ern­ment’s goal is to scan 75 per cent of all con­tain­ers to align with in­ter­na­tion­al stan­dards, Ju­man said the aim is to reach 100 per cent of con­tain­ers. To ad­dress health and safe­ty con­cerns—par­tic­u­lar­ly wor­ries that ra­di­a­tion ex­po­sure may af­fect male fer­til­i­ty—a spe­cialised ra­di­a­tion com­mit­tee will be es­tab­lished.

This com­mit­tee will be chaired by the Min­istry of Health’s ra­di­a­tion pro­tec­tion of­fi­cer and will in­clude a ra­di­a­tion safe­ty of­fi­cer sta­tioned at the port along with cus­toms of­fi­cials.

“This is one of the rea­sons for that com­mit­tee, to make sure every­body’s safe. I can’t say if the union might, in the fu­ture, want to make some ob­jec­tion, but right now there is no is­sue what­so­ev­er,” Im­bert said.

Each scan­ner will be op­er­at­ed by two peo­ple plus a dri­ver, or just two peo­ple in re­mote set­tings. Mean­while, the fi­nance min­is­ter does not an­tic­i­pate sab­o­tage of the equip­ment.

“This is go­ing to be hand­ed over to the Rev­enue Au­thor­i­ty, and I cer­tain­ly hope that they would have prop­er safe­guards in place. I don’t think there’ll be sab­o­tage.”

As for main­te­nance, the sup­pli­er has been con­tract­ed to main­tain the equip­ment and train cus­toms work­ers. Once the con­tract ex­pires, cus­toms of­fi­cials will take over main­te­nance du­ties.

While the busi­ness com­mu­ni­ty wel­comes greater ef­fi­cien­cy, the Down­town Own­ers and Mer­chants As­so­ci­a­tion (DO­MA) has ex­pressed frus­tra­tion over what it calls un­fair sus­pi­cion of busi­ness own­ers im­port­ing con­tra­band.

DO­MA pres­i­dent Gre­go­ry Aboud ar­gued that the in­flux of il­le­gal items is due to porous bor­ders, not con­tain­er ship­ments. He point­ed out that the 25,000 miss­ing rounds of am­mu­ni­tion from the De­fence Force did not en­ter through busi­ness own­ers’ con­tain­ers.

“We un­der­stand the need to scan all these con­tain­ers, we have no prob­lem with it. But you are scan­ning con­tain­ers of pow­dered milk, rice, and Chi­nese-man­u­fac­tured goods, de­vot­ing re­sources that seem mis­al­lo­cat­ed when guns and am­mu­ni­tion are com­ing from of­fi­cial sources,” Aboud said. He urged au­thor­i­ties to fo­cus on bor­der se­cu­ri­ty and safe­guard­ing am­mu­ni­tion stor­age fa­cil­i­ties in­stead.

Im­bert added that the scan­ners at Point Lisas will be com­mis­sioned in due course.


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