You have to be right. I understand this. And when your not you try to bludgeon with your verbosity and wikpedia detective work.
I answered the simple question of a forumite whose wine was confiscated via secondary security screening at HKG airport. I work at the airport. You weighed in and looking back its obvious you were not aware of this process and corrected me as follows.
Mahmoud Ali wrote:Again, nothing to do with Guantanamo or the interrogations there. The threat was discovered by British Police in 2006. The plot was directed at planes heading to the United States. The liquid bans stemmed directly from the police raids that led to the arrest of 24 people. According to Wikipedia:
The question was not about the 2006 liquid security protocols put into place after the UK. But of the additional secondary security screening put into place that had a forumites wine confiscated just before the aircraft door, due to fresh intelligence on a combination of regional threats and regional tactics in combination with earlier plots.
Mahmoud Ali wrote:And really, no duty free items, purchased at the departing airport is confiscated. Neither are duty free items purchased at other airports provided it is in your check-in luggage. Only duty free items purchased in another airport is confiscated if hand carried through transit.
QED
This was the scenario of the forumite having his wine confiscated and that of many others. In plane language, their wine was confiscated yet you say it wasn't.
This paragraph again clearly shows you are not at all familiar with secondary security screening at certain stages of this thread. Yes, like before, your knowledge builds through wikpedia, and your verbosity is your defence.
You did not know what you were talking about here but was happy to tell somebody who works at the airport and in the industry they were wrong.
Mahmoud Ali wrote:Your second paragraph is misleading. Confiscation is not the policy per se but rather it stems from a breach of allowable limits. You may not take over 100ml amounts through airport security nor aircraft security prior to boarding. However, you may take much more if it is purchased in a duty free store within the departure area. Most airport duty free stores seal the items in a clear plastic bag.
Again wrong ! 100ml of water or coke or whatever was CONFISCATED. It was separate protocols. I could have gone into SSS rules but it was not RELEVANT.
And then you quote the HK civil aviation authority but you've gone up the wrong path. Because fundamentally, you don't know what you are talking about and started confused about the topic. Very clearly as indicated from above not being aware of two separate liquid security protocols in Asia.
I didn't get around to answering Wiz's questions in detail. I'm sure he's appreciative of your google work- you saved him a few minutes. Though flying the routes, with my colleagues selling duty free onboard my aircraft, I could have contributed with up to date info' and pragmatic advice. But I'm too busy defending myself from your confusion and verbosity.
Politics I'm happy disengage from. I stand by my comments the the savagery of the Middle East is inflicted by neighbour upon neighbour ( often a long way from western interests ). Grows from there.