IATA has urged governments to close legal
loopholes that allow unruly passengers to escape law enforcement
for serious offences committed on board aircraft.
Today (26 March
2014), governments will gather for a diplomatic conference at the
International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) in Montreal to
discuss revisions to the Tokyo Convention.
The revisions would
enhance the ability of law enforcement and other authorities to
prosecute the small minority of passengers who are violent,
disruptive, abusive, or acting in a manner which might endanger
safety.
The Tokyo Convention was negotiated in 1963 and
it gives jurisdiction over offenses committed onboard aircraft to
the state of registration of the aircraft. With modern leasing arrangements, the state of aircraft registry is often neither the
state in which the aircraft lands nor the state of the operator.
This limits the practicality of enforcement and consequently the
options available to mitigate disruptive behaviors. For this
reason, the airline industry supports proposals for jurisdiction
to be extended to both the state in which the aircraft lands and
the state in which the operator is located.
"Airlines are
doing all they can to prevent and manage unruly passenger
incidents, but this needs to be backed up with effective law
enforcement. Reports of unruly behavior are on the rise. The Tokyo
Convention was not originally designed to address unruly behavior
and there is a great deal of uncertainty amongst carriers as to
what actions crew can take to manage incidents in the air. And if
the aircraft lands in a state other than where the aircraft was
registered, local authorities are not always able to prosecute,"
said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director General and CEO.
"Passengers expect to enjoy their journey incident-free. And air
crews have the right to perform their duties without harassment.
In addition, the inconvenience to other travelers of a forced
diversion is significant. At the moment there are too many
examples of people getting away with serious breaches of social
norms that jeopardize the safety of flights because local law
enforcement authorities do not have the power to take action. IATA
applauds the work of ICAO and supports the proposed revisions to
the Tokyo Convention. Closing these legal loopholes will better
deter such behavior and make passengers think twice before acting
in ways that may put the safety of many at risk," Tyler added.
IATA,
ICAO,
Security
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