WASHINGTON: A report prepared by experts, U.S. cargo aircraft inspection procedures, which may carry parcels from several places in the world is not at a high level of efficiency compared with examinations and inspections of passengers planes.
The network quoted a "CBS News" U.S. Saturday experts as saying "Maybe it is up to the enormous amount of packages that link the country each day, where up to the country about 37 500 tonnes of parcels on board a cargo aircraft, while being sent 12500 tons of other cargo on passenger planes. "
The report noted that airports in New York receives about 5500 tons per day, up in Los Angeles about 4400 tons, while the share of Chicago in 2700 tons of packages. "
Said Larry Johnson, aviation security expert, "There are no conditions or mechanisms to check the packages that arrive on a cargo plane to determine whether the hazardous materials or explosives."
He added: "Often they are checking in shipments to reach across the companies not included in the known shipper program, which includes companies that deal with permanent U.S. airports, and apply the safety measures are very high."
And student management experts Transport Security and the adoption of stricter inspection measures and the adoption of a thorough examination and Asthaddad dogs.
The U.S. authorities Friday the inspections of long-cargo aircraft, including planes landed at airports in Philadelphia and Newark in New Jersey and on the back of a suspicious package found on board a cargo plane belonging to "United Parcel Services" of Yemen.
The Transportation Security Administration said that the cargo flights which landed safely in Philadelphia and Newark airports were inspected after "reports of finding suspicious materials on the plane coming from Yemen."
A statement from the Transportation Security Administration, "it was the transfer of aircraft to a remote location where the officials of law enforcement duties and that objectors caution."
The newspaper "Philadelphia Inquirer" American spokeswoman for the airport as saying "it is to explore the possible presence of explosives" in Philadelphia, noting the administration official responsible for fire-fighting to "a possible radiological accident."
The Inquirer reported that a cargo plane belonging to other companies that used to come out of Philadelphia was also searched.
In New York, a police spokesman said he was also searched a truck belonging to the company in the borough of Queens in New York