Brussels: Airports and airlines across Europe moved rapidly to tighten security on U.S.-bound flights on Saturday after a man tried to set off explosives on a plane flying from Amsterdam to Detroit.
Authorities in Britain, France, Italy, Spain and the Netherlands either increased passenger checks or reinforced security measures already stepped up ahead of the busy Christmas and New Year travel period, officials said.
The measures follow a formal request from the U.S. Department of Transportation to airports worldwide to ratchet up security following the failed Christmas Day attack on a Delta Air Lines flight by a Nigerian suspect, officials said.
German authorities said they were considering increasing airport security but hadn't done so yet.
British airports group BAA, which manages Heathrow -- Europe's busiest airport by passenger numbers -- said airlines had strengthened security and travelers should expect delays during one of the busiest travel periods of the year.
"Passengers traveling to the United States should expect their airline to carry out additional security checks prior to boarding," the company said in a statement.
A spokesman for Aeroports de Paris said the U.S. transport authority had specifically asked airports to search passenger luggage more thoroughly and to carry out extra pat-down searches of passengers before they board U.S.-bound flights.
"We received instructions from the U.S. ... last night and it's up to the individual airlines to put them in place," the spokesman said.
"The instructions were sent to all the countries in the world and apply to all airlines traveling to the U.S."
The vice-president of the European Commission, Jacques Barrot, said European authorities were in touch with the United States and would do everything to keep airline security tight.
"This incident shows once again that vigilance is necessary at all times in the fight against terror," he said.
Bureau Report
First Published: Saturday, December 26, 2009, 22:28