National Border Targeting Centre


The National Border Targeting Centre is a division and site of the Border Force in the United Kingdom, that collates and processes data on people entering and leaving the UK. It is the information-processing site that keeps track of migration into the UK. It operates 24 hours a day.

History

It was opened on Thursday 11 March 2010 by the UK Border Agency. The e-Borders systems had been launched in May 2009, with Project Semaphore running as a prototype from 2004. It replaced the Joint Border Operations Centre at Heathrow, a much smaller site.

Structure

The site is run by the Home Office. It has around 200 staff in Wythenshawe, Manchester. It is part of the Intelligence, Targeting and Watchlisting Command within the Border Force.

Function

Passengers on flights entering and leaving the UK are screened by the NBTC. The airlines pass data on each passenger to the NBTC, including date of birth. The NBTC tracks former flights taken by each individual going back up to a decade, and determines whether an individual's flight history could be suspicious. Each individual is checked against criminal record databases. Exit checks are conducted at ferry ports connecting to European ports by the ferry operators.
It looks at the e-Borders Semaphore system for suspects. It looks mainly for rapists and murderers and pirates. It tracks around 250 million passenger movements per year. It has no defence against false passports. It operates the Pre-Departure Checks Scheme.