EU’s
passport fraud ‘epidemic’
Refugee
crisis and Paris attacks put spotlight on Europe’s passport
free-for-all.
By GIULIA
PARAVICINI 1/28/16, 5:36 AM CET
http://www.politico.eu/article/europes-fake-forged-stolen-passport-epidemic-visa-free-travel-rights/
ROME — Europe’s
trade in forged and stolen passports is so out of control that the
U.S. has given five EU countries until next week to act or risk
losing visa-free travel rights.
The threat comes in
response to growing alarm over the rising number of lost and stolen
documents in the EU, which has doubled in five years. The number of
forged passports in the Middle East is also a rising concern.
Interpol has data on 250,000 stolen or lost Syrian and Iraqi
passports, including blank documents.
American and
European security officials speak of an “epidemic” created by a
spike in demand from asylum-seekers — and from terrorists like
those who carried out the Paris attacks last November, two of whom
were carrying counterfeit documents.
In the aftermath of
Paris, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security became so worried
about the implications for screening travelers to America that it
gave France, Belgium, Germany, Italy and Greece a February 1 deadline
to fix “crucial loopholes” or lose access to the U.S. visa waiver
program. The program allows about 20 million people per year from 38
countries, most of them in Europe, to enter the United States for
business or pleasure without a visa.
Next week, homeland
security chief Jeh Johnson will report to President Barack Obama on
how these countries have progressed.
On the issue of
fraudulent passports, U.S. officials see a particular problem with
two of the five: Greece and Italy.
The importance of
counterfeit documents “as a facilitator in the movement of
terrorists” is nothing new, said Interpol’s director of
operational support and analysis, Michael O’Connell, pointing to
the findings of the 9/11 Commission Report in the U.S..
European governments
are aware of the problem. When EU justice and interior ministers met
in Amsterdam on Monday, France’s Bernard Cazeneuve called for the
creation of a task force to tackle a “real industry of false
documents in Iraq, Syria and Libya,” which he said was run by the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, or ISIL.
Cazeneuve said
fraudulent passports are “very hard to detect” because they are
often genuine documents seized from pubic offices overrun by ISIL or
taken from dead soldiers or civilians. The French minister said that
combating this trade was crucial to avoiding “further atrocities in
future.”
Lost in transit
Two of the men who
blew themselves up at the Stade de France on November 13 had used
fake Syrian passports to cross into Greece. Four days later, Serbian
police arrested a man with a Syrian passport that had the same
details as one found near the body of one of the suicide bombers.
On December 16
Austrian police arrested two men who requested asylum using fake
Syrian passports, and a few days later, two Syrians with an Austrian
and a Norwegian passport were arrested in Italy en route to Malta.
Greece and Italy are
especially important to efforts to combat the traffic in illegal
documents because of their position as front-line states in Europe’s
refugee crisis — and by extension, in the fight against ISIL.
“Document
fraud is an important enabler of organized crime and terrorism,
clearly. There is a whole subset of criminal activity and a criminal
sector that is involved in stealing passports and producing
sophisticated passports and supplying them to the criminal market.”
— Europol Director Rob Wainwright
One Greek
intelligence official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that
“between 5 and 7 percent of all Greek passports stem from fake ID
cards or birth certificates,” which he acknowledged were “fairly
easy” to procure.
U.S. Secretary of
State John Kerry brought up this problem with Greek officials when he
visited Athens in early December, sources said. Ten days later, the
Greek ministry of public order and the police set up a joint task
force which has until the end of February to come up with a plan to
replace existing national ID cards with electronic versions with a
computer chip.
A man holds his
Syrian passport as migrants and refugees protest against Turkish
police blocking the access to the road and the ticket office for the
Turkey-Greece border towns on September 15, 2015 at Istanbul's
Esenler Bus Terminal.
In Italy, pubic
prosecutors are due in two weeks to release the findings of an
investigation into the theft of hundreds of faulty passports from a
batch of thousands on their way to be pulped 18 months ago. Police
were only alerted to the theft a few months later when a traveler
attempted to use a passport at Rome’s Fiumicino airport, with a
serial number that records showed had supposedly been destroyed.
It is not just
Greece and Italy that have a problem.
“There are certain
countries, like Sweden, where you can lose your passports four to six
times in a year and get four to six new passports. To date I believe
there are at least 20,000 duplicates out there,” said one EU
security official with knowledge of the issue, who spoke on condition
of anonymity.
A
whole travel package, including an EU passport, can cost up to
€10,000.
Fake and fraudulent
European passports are more expensive than Middle Eastern ones
because they come under less scrutiny at the border. According to
police from several European countries, prices on the black market
for stolen, lost or forged EU documents range from €2,000 to
€7,000.
“A whole travel
package, including an EU passport, can cost up to €10,000,” said
an Austrian intelligence official. “From what we know, the main
production units are in the Balkans, followed by Turkey.”
People smugglers
Europol, the EU’s
law enforcement agency, said criminal gangs have been investing more
in the production of fake documents since they spotted a business
opportunity in the migrant crisis.
“In
the last period of last year we have seen the increasing importance
of documents forgery and of identity forgery in the business of
smuggling people to Europe,” Europol Director Rob
Wainwright told POLITICO.
“Document fraud is
an important enabler of organized crime and terrorism, clearly. There
is a whole subset of criminal activity and a criminal sector that is
involved in stealing passports and producing sophisticated passports
and supplying them to the criminal market,” said Wainwright.
In the last six
years, Interpol has seen a sharp uptick in the number of missing
passports — within Europe and around the globe.
As part of broader
efforts to address major shortcomings in coordination between
national security agencies and police that were highlighted by the
Paris attacks, interior ministers called in November for all EU
external border control points to be connected to Interpol’s global
databases and for automatic screening of travel documents by March
this year.
Access to Interpol’s
databases enables instant checks against nearly 55 million travel
documents. The agency’s database of Stolen and Lost Travel
Documents was set up in 2002, in the aftermath of 9/11, to help
member countries detect the use of fraudulent travel documents. Among
the documents logged are nearly 30,000 Syrian passports, of which
about 4,000 were stolen as blank documents.
Interpol is keen for
policymakers at every level — from the U.N. and EU to national
governments and parliaments — to make fuller use of its data “to
help them in their national security architecture and also to remind
them that the misuse of identity documents facilitates crime and
terror,” said Interpol’s O’Connell.
“We have to raise
the level of public awareness and properly educate people to protect
their identity the same way they do with their credit cards,”
O’Connell said.
“They have to
realize that a lost passport is a gateway for international travel
and a public commodity to trade nowadays.
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