Home Office awards $4.4 million for biometric visas

Published 25 September 2007

The U.K. Home Office has been shopping for more fingerprint scanners, and now has given a Florida company a contract for 1,385 of them

The U.K. biometrics visa program has awarded a $4.4 million contract to Cross Match Technologies for the supply of fingerprint scanners to U.K. overseas missions. The Palm Beach Gardens, Florida-based biometric identity company will provide British embassies and consulates around the world with 1,385 of its livescan Guardian scanner devices. The contract was awarded through the U.K. Home Office Biometrics Framework Agreement as part of the new visa program.

The Guardian scanners will be up and running by the end of the year and Cross Match will be delivering the tech with the help of services company Steria UK. Head of procurement for UKvisas, Andrew Pestell, said the biometric visas are a key part of the Border and Immigration Agency’s (BIA) plan to strengthen UK borders. He said as the identity of individuals can be fixed at the earliest possible point, it will help ensure only people with permission can travel to the United Kkingdom. It was recently reported that the government has been recording more than 100,000 fingerprints per month from foreign nationals applying to come to the United Kingdom. The fingerprints are checked with U.K. government records to see if the individual is known to the BIA. The biometric program has been running since September 2006 and aims to record fingerprints of every foreign national applying for a U.K. visa by April next year.