Speaking to the press on June 7, a representative of Tan Son Nhat International Airport said that the airport has piloted the use of level 2 electronic identification accounts for air passengers in accordance with ACV's procedures sent to its affiliated ports on June 2.
Tan Son Nhat Airport has piloted the use of level 2 electronic identification accounts for passengers checking in for flights.
The pilot implementation of accepting passengers using level 2 electronic identification accounts is being deployed at check-in counters, departure gate checkpoints and aviation security checkpoints for domestic passengers and carry-on baggage.
The pilot is only conducted with voluntary passengers. Airline staff pledge not to use passenger information for illegal purposes and signs announcing the acceptance of Level 2 electronic identification accounts are placed at check-in counters, aviation security check lines and pilot boarding points.
"Since the pilot implementation, Tan Son Nhat Airport has recorded a small number of passengers using level 2 electronic identification accounts through airport security. Because it is voluntary, security staff will only do it when a passenger requests it. Security staff conduct checks very professionally, quickly and without any difficulty. Up to this point, only nearly 200 passengers have piloted using level 2 electronic identification accounts instead of identification documents when flying" - Tan Son Nhat Airport representative informed.
How to check in for a flight using a level 2 electronic identification account
The leaders of the busiest airport in the country also pay attention to unusual cases. Through observation, if the aviation security control staff sees passengers showing unusual signs such as behavior, attitude, clothing, luggage, etc., they will follow these steps:
Step 1: Check the passenger's boarding pass. If the passenger is found to be on the blacklist, follow the procedure for detecting blacklisted passengers. If the passenger's boarding pass is normal, the passenger is not on the blacklist, the passenger is flying on a charter flight or a private plane, the security officer will perform the next steps.
Step 2: Require passengers to open their own level 2 electronic identification account and enable the "Verify application via QR code" function in the "Personal" section; then, request passengers to return to the "Home page" to create an electronic identification QR code.
Step 3: The aviation security officer opens his level 2 electronic identification account and then scans the QR code on the passenger's level 2 electronic identification account to identify the passenger's VNeID application.
If the QR code on the passenger’s VNeID application cannot be scanned (due to network errors, electronic device malfunctions, etc.), the security officer will ask the passenger to present one of the other types of flight identification documents for additional inspection. If the passenger fails to present a valid identification document, the aviation security officer will refuse to complete the security check procedure.
The final step is to visually compare the passenger's photo on the level 2 electronic identification account with the passenger and visually compare the flight's passenger information with the information on the level 2 electronic identification account.
Tan Son Nhat International Airport also recommends that passengers during the pilot phase should not rely too much on level 2 electronic identification accounts because in case the phone has problems or the information does not match, without a citizen identification card, the information cannot be processed to board the plane. Therefore, passengers should still be cautious and bring identification documents according to regulations.
In particular, families with small children should note that all documents must be stamped with a red seal. Airport security does not accept photocopied identification documents such as birth certificates without a notarized copy of the original.
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