Last July, the Bureau of Immigration (BI) installed 11 new immigration electronic gates (e-gates) at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) to speed up the immigration process for international travelers. Officials said, however, that it was not be open yet to all passengers. “The project is still in its experimental phase,” BI Port Operations Division head Marc Red Marinas said. They still need “to fine-tune the machines and the program before giving it a ‘go’ signal” for actual operations.
Good news for holiday travelers, though, because a total of 18 e-gates are now operational at three international airports: NAIA, Mactan-Cebu International Airport, and Davao International Airport (formally known as Francisco Bangoy International Airport).
Expecting the “influx of balikbayan and OFWs who will come home during the holidays,” BI Commissioner Jaime Morente said they targeted to finish the e-gate installation at the three international airports to “ease lines during the peak season.”
Thirteen of these operational e-gates are at NAIA. Five e-gates are located at Terminal 3 while eight of them have been recently installed at Terminals 1 and 2.
There are two functional e-gates at the Davao airport while three ones are at the Mactan airport in Cebu.
These machines will only take eight to 15 seconds to process a passenger, much shorter than the estimated one to five minutes spent at the immigration counter.
BI stressed that the e-gates are programmed to be friendly and easy to use. According to this travel blog, you only have to follow three steps to breeze through the immigration process:
- Place and scan your passport and boarding pass below the screen. Wait for the first gate to open.
- Place your finger on the scanner for the biometrics. Wait for the second gate to open.
- Get your arrival sticker and stick it on the visa page (this is very important as some passengers have mistakenly placed it on other pages) of your Philippine passport.
The e-gates are programmed to detect passengers with derogatory records, especially those who are in the country’s immigration blacklist, watch list, and hold departure list.
Amounting to P329-million, this project was funded by the government in partnership with the International Air Transport Association.
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Featured photos courtesy of JP Mortel Fajura’s Facebook post
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