Security Levels
What Are The Security Levels Under ISPS Code?
The security levels under the ISPS code describe the current scenario related to the security threat to the country and its coastal region including the ships visiting that country.The security levels are decided
by the cooperation of ship and port authorities, keeping the current condition
of national and international security.
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| Security Level |
The local government sets
the security level and ensures to inform port state and ships prior to entering
the port, or when berthed in the port.
All personnel onboard
ships and port state staff are assigned security duties, which are different
for people of different levels. Moreover, frequent security drills are also
carried out onboard ships.
As soon as the security
level has been decided as per the ISPS code, it is displayed
prominently onboard vessel at the entrance of the ship.
It should be noted that
the MARSEC level of the ship should always be the same or higher than the
port’s MARSEC level.
For any of the security
levels, the following are the general points to be kept in mind:
- Checking the identity of all
persons boarding/wanting to board the vessel
- Designated secure areas are
established in liaison with the PFSO
- Segregate checked persons from
those unchecked for ease of operation
- Segregating embarkation and
disembarkation
- Identification of access points to
be secured against unauthorised access
- Securing of areas that provide
access to personnel
- Providing security briefings to
all ship personnel on possible threats and the levels associated with the
port
- Compliance with the SSP at all times
ISPS ကုဒ်အောက်ရှိ လုံခြုံရေးအဆင့်များသည်
ထိုနိုင်ငံသို့လာရောက်သောသင်္ဘောများအပါအဝင် နိုင်ငံနှင့်
၎င်း၏ကမ်းရိုးတန်းဒေသအတွက် လုံခြုံရေးခြိမ်းခြောက်မှုနှင့်ပတ်သက်သည့်
လက်ရှိအခြေအနေအား ဖော်ပြသည်။
လုံခြုံရေးအဆင့်များကို သင်္ဘောနှင့် ဆိပ်ကမ်းအာဏာပိုင်များ၏
ပူးပေါင်းဆောင်ရွက်မှုဖြင့် ဆုံးဖြတ်ပြီး လက်ရှိ နိုင်ငံတော်နှင့် နိုင်ငံတကာ
လုံခြုံရေးအခြေအနေများကို ထိန်းထားရသည်။
ဒေသန္တရအစိုးရသည် လုံခြုံရေးအဆင့်ကို သတ်မှတ်ပြီး ဆိပ်ကမ်းအခြေအနေနှင့် သင်္ဘောများကို ဆိပ်ကမ်းမ၀င်မီ သို့မဟုတ် ဆိပ်ကမ်းတွင် ဆိုက်ကပ်သည့်အခါတွင် အကြောင်းကြားရန် သေချာစေပါသည်။
သင်္ဘောပေါ်ရှိ ဝန်ထမ်းများနှင့် ဆိပ်ကမ်းပြည်နယ် ဝန်ထမ်းများအားလုံးကို လုံခြုံရေးတာဝန်များ ပေးအပ်ထားပြီး အဆင့်အမျိုးမျိုးရှိ လူများအတွက် ကွဲပြားသည်။ ထို့အပြင် သင်္ဘောပေါ်တွင် လုံခြုံရေးလေ့ကျင့်မှုများလည်း မကြာခဏ ပြုလုပ်ခဲ့သည်။
ISPS ကုဒ်အရ လုံခြုံရေးအဆင့်ကို ဆုံးဖြတ်ပြီးသည်နှင့် တပြိုင်နက်၊ ၎င်းကို သင်္ဘော၏အဝင်ဝတွင် သင်္ဘောပေါ်၌ ထင်ထင်ရှားရှားပြသထားသည်။
သင်္ဘော၏ MARSEC အဆင့်သည် ဆိပ်ကမ်း၏ MARSEC အဆင့်ထက် အမြဲတူညီနေသင့်သည် သို့မဟုတ် မြင့်မားနေသင့်သည်။
လုံခြုံရေးအဆင့်တစ်ခုခုအတွက်၊ အောက်ဖော်ပြပါ ယေဘူယျအချက်များသည် သတိထားရမည့်အချက်များဖြစ်သည်-
သင်္ဘောပေါ်တက်/တက်လိုသူအားလုံး၏ အထောက်အထားကို စစ်ဆေးခြင်း။
သတ်မှတ်ထားသော လုံခြုံသောနယ်မြေများကို PFSO နှင့် ဆက်ဆံရေးတွင် ထူထောင်ထားသည်။
လည်ပတ်ရလွယ်ကူစေရန်အတွက် စစ်ဆေးပြီးသားလူများကို ခွဲခြားထားသည်။
တက်ခြင်းနှင့် ဆင်းသက်ခြင်းတို့ကို ခွဲခြားထားသည်။
ခွင့်ပြုချက်မရှိဘဲ ဝင်ရောက်ခြင်းမှ လုံခြုံစေမည့် ဝင်ခွင့်အမှတ်များကို
ဖော်ထုတ်ခြင်း။
ဝန်ထမ်းဝင်ရောက်ခွင့် ပေးသည့် နယ်မြေများကို လုံခြုံစေခြင်း။
ဖြစ်နိုင်ခြေရှိသော ခြိမ်းခြောက်မှုများနှင့် ဆိပ်ကမ်းနှင့်ဆက်စပ်သည့်
အဆင့်များနှင့်ပတ်သက်၍ သင်္ဘောဝန်ထမ်းများအား လုံခြုံရေးအကျဉ်းချုပ်များ
ပေးအပ်ခြင်း။
SSP ကို အချိန်တိုင်း လိုက်နာပါ။
MARSEC Level 1
The normal level that the
ship or port facility operates on a daily basis. Level 1 ensures that security
personnel maintains minimum appropriate security 24/7.
In this, all those liable
to board must be searched. The frequency of the same should be specified in the
SSP. Such searches are to be carried out in coordination with the port
facility.
It is important to
remember the human rights angle of the individual being searched and the search
should not violate their dignity.
- Minimum security measures are
always maintained onboard and in port
- Ship and port operation is carried
out as per ship and port facility security plan
- Port facility ensures to keep the
‘no access’ areas under surveillance at all times
- Ship and port authority mutually
supervise the loading and unloading operation of cargo and stores,
ensuring access control and other minimum security criteria.
- Minimum access in the ship is
maintained at all times.
MARSEC
Level 2
A heightened level for a
time period during a security risk that has become visible to security
personnel. Appropriate additional measures will be conducted at this security
level.
At this level, the SSP
should establish the measures to be applied to protect against the heightened
risk. Higher vigilance and tighter control with regard to the security of the
ship is in play here.
- Assigning additional personnel for
patrolling the access areas
- Deterring waterside access to the
ship
- Establishing a restricted area on
the shore side of the ship
- Increasing the search frequency
and detail of the persons due to board or disembark
- Escorting all visitors onboard
- Additional security briefings to
the ship’s personnel to with emphasis in relation to the security level
- Carrying out a full or partial
search of the ship
MARSEC Level 3
Will include additional
security measures for an incident that is forthcoming or has already occurred
that must be maintained for a limited time frame. The security measure must be
attended to although there might not be a specific target that has yet been
identified.
Again, the SSP should be
adhered to and with strong liaison with the port facility. The following
measures should be put in place with the highest degree of vigilance and
detail:
- Limiting access to a single, controlled
access point
- Granting access strictly to
authorised personnel or those responding to any security incident
- Suspension of embarkation and
disembarkation
- Suspension of cargo operations and
stores etc
- If needed, the evacuation of the
ship
- Close monitoring of the movement
of the people on board
- Preparing for a full or partial
search of the ship
Restricted Areas
The SSP must identify
areas that are restricted which are to be established on board. The purpose of
such areas is to restrict access, protect the personnel on board, protect the
cargo from pilferage or tampering etc.
The restricted areas may
include the navigation bridge, machinery spaces, spaces with security-related
equipment, ventilation spaces, spaces containing IMDG cargo, accommodation, any
other areas specified as per the SSP.
With regard to the
restricted areas, the measures to be applied to them are as follows:
MARSEC Level 1
- Locking/securing access points
- Using surveillance equipment to
monitor areas
- Thorough patrolling
- Using alarm system to alert the
ship’s personnel in case of unwanted entry
MARSEC Level 2
- Establishing restricted areas in
the vicinity of the access points
- Continuously monitoring
surveillance equipment
- Additional personnel for
patrolling said areas
MARSEC Level 3
- Setup of restricted areas near the
access points at the highest level of stringency
- Searching for restricted areas as
part of the ship search
Cargo Handling
Security measures are in
place vis a vis cargo operations to prevent tampering as well as to prevent the
carriage of any cargo that has not been authorised or established to be carried
onboard. The following measures can be used as a reference:
MARSEC Level 1
- Routine checks on cargo, transport
units, cargo spaces
- Matching cargo with the
documentation
- Loading vehicles subjected to
search in liaison with the PFSO
- Checking seals to prevent
tampering
MARSEC Level 2
- Detailed checking of cargo,
transport units, cargo spaces
- Intense checks to ensure only
intended cargo is loaded
- Intense check on loading vehicles
- Increased frequency of checking
seals
MARSEC Level 3
- Suspension of loading or
discharging
- Verify inventory of DG and
hazardous substances onboard
Delivery Of Ships Stores
Stores should be checked
for packing integrity including random checks on samples. Nop stores should be
accepted without inspection; check if tampered with if accepted. Unless
ordered, stores should not be accepted.
Double-check with
documentary evidence about what has been ordered and what has not. Following
measures may be used as reference:
MARSEC Level 1
- Match orders with documents prior
to loading
- Stow the stores securely
MARSEC Level 2
- Thorough checks prior to loading
stores and intensifying inspections of the same
MARSEC Level 3
- Delivery of stores to be taken
only in case of emergency
Handling of unaccompanied
baggage
Baggage must be screened
before taking on board; use advanced methods such as X-ray if needed.
MARSEC Level 1
- Baggage screened and searched
which may include X-ray screening
MARSEC Level 2
- Full screening including X-ray of
all baggage
MARSEC Level 3
- Suspension of baggage handling
- Refusal to accept any
unaccompanied pieces of baggage
Monitoring the security
of the ship
The aspect of monitoring
must cover lighting, watchkeepers including security guards for patrolling,
intrusion detection devices. These intrusion devices must be capable of setting
off an alarm.
The ship’s deck and
access points should be illuminated in darkness as well as the vicinity of the
ship depending on the extent of security threat that is at stake. In ports
prone to contraband smuggling, an underwater hill check must also be carried
out.
The security of the ship
and the port are complementary to each other. One cannot be safe without the
help of the other. The SSO and PFSO’s communication and cooperation is
essential to the compliance of the SSP and the upkeep of security levels.
If you liked this
article, you may also like to read ISPS Code & IMO.



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