CAIRO // Egyptian officials said on Sunday they were inching closer to meeting all demands set by Russia on airport security to resume flights to Egypt, suspended after militants from a local affiliate of ISIL downed a Russian airliner 15 months ago over the Sinai Peninsula.
Since the crash, Egypt has spent millions of dollars to upgrade security at its airports, particularly in Cairo and several destinations popular with foreign tourists, like Sharm El Sheikh and Hurghada on the Red Sea.
The officials said work has begun to install 16 finger-print security gates for employees at two of Cairo airport's main terminals and to raise an existing but potentially vulnerable, 1-kilometre stretch of fence separating the east Cairo facility from a residential suburb.
The officials said 12 finger-print gates have already been installed at terminal 2, the airport's newest terminal from which Russian national carrier Aeroflot was expected to operate when flights resume. The decision to install similar gates at terminals 1 and 3 was recommended by the Russians.
The finger-print scans were purchased in place of retinal scans that airport officials had said in October they would tender for the employees' gates but which proved to be too expensive and more difficult to operate.
Russian airport security experts have visited Egypt on at least six occasions since the October 2015 crash to assess the effectiveness of new security measures put in place by the Egyptians to persuade Moscow to resume flights.
The latest Russian inspection took place earlier this year and the Egyptian officials said on Sunday they would invite them back in about two weeks to inspect the facility one last time before they give the airport their nod of approval.
Russian officials have similarly said that they were close to resuming flights to Egypt, but they have not set a specific date.
Moscow suspended air links to Egypt after ISIL militants downed the airliner in 2015, killing all 224 people on board and decimating the country's vital tourism industry. The aircraft had taken off from Sharm El Sheikh, in southern Sinai, before it crashed.
Britain followed Russia's example and suspended all flights to Sharm El Sheikh after the crash, dealing another serious blow to Egypt's tourism industry since Britons and Russians accounted for more than half of foreign visitors to Egypt on the eve of the crash.
The slump in tourism, along with a series of minor but disruptive terror attacks targeting foreign tourists or touristic sites, has significantly contributed to Egypt's economic woes.
Security related problems at Cairo airport, however, persist.
Airport security officials said a random check on Sunday targeting personnel working on the facility's grounds nabbed 23 employees with expired access permits, driving without a license or exceeding the speed limit.
* Associated Press
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