Study Shows International push for Airport Body Scanners

A new Financial Times/Harris Poll of adults under 65 finds support for increased security measures after the attempted bombing of a plane on Christmas Day.  Majorities of those surveyed in the United States (64 percent), Great Britain (62 percent), Italy (58 percent), France (58 percent), and Germany (53 percent) as well as 46 percent of Spaniards and 44 percent of Chinese all agree that body scanners that X-ray the full body should be introduced at airports.

As reported by Security Products, these are some of the findings of a Financial Times/Harris Poll conducted online by Harris Interactive among 7,256 adults aged 16-64 in France, Germany, Great Britain, Spain and the United States, adults aged 18-64 in Italy and adults aged 18-60 in China between February 3 and 10.

The support changes depending on country for other security measures. Seven in ten Italians (71 percent), two-thirds of Chinese (67 percent), over three in five Spaniards (63 percent), half of French adults (50 percent), just under half of Germans (48 percent) and 43 percent of Britons all agree that governments should increase security checks in public places such as parks, shopping centers, and other places where large groups gather. Americans are more divided. While two in five (40 percent) agree with this idea, 35 percent do not and one-quarter (26 percent) neither agree nor disagree.

Filed Under: BlogsHomeland Security

About the Author: Annie is the spokesperson for Home Security Store and Editor in Chief for Security World News. For the past decade she has been in the public eye working in television news from Anchor to Film Critic to Helicopter Reporter.

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