BRUSSELS: From today, non-EU travellers entering Europe’s Schengen open-borders zone will be photographed and fingerprinted at border crossings, as the EU rolls out its much-delayed automated border checks.
The aim of the new system is to eventually replace the manual stamp on passports and secure better information-sharing between the bloc’s 27 states.
The border-check system will allow authorities to know when people entered and exited a country, with the goal of better detecting anyone overstaying and people refused entry.