A. Entering a country
On arrival in most countries, you have to show your passport or national identity card, possibly a
landing card1 and often a
customs declaration form2. You may need a visa and a
vaccination certificate3, depending on
entry regulations4. Alternatively, some passengers can use e-passport gates which make use of
facial recognition technology5. Customs officers carry out
spot checks6 on people’s baggage to find
banned or restricted goods7 and to check that you haven’t gone over your
allowance8. They may use
sniffer/detector dogs9 to
detect10 drugs, tobacco, cash or explosives. In most cases, you have to clear
customs11 at the
port of entry12. Some passengers may wish to be recognised as
refugees13 and claim asylum14. People who claim asylum in this way are sometimes called asylum-seekers.
- 1 form with your personal details and date of arrival
- 2 form showing how much money and what goods you are carrying
- 3 paper proving you have had the necessary health injections
- 4 rules about who can enter a country and for how long
- 5 computer application that can automatically identify a person from a visual image
- 6 checks done as a sample, rather than checking everyone or everything
- 7 items that are forbidden or only permitted in specified quantities
- 8 amount permitted by law
- 9 specially trained dogs who locate things using their sense of smell
- 10 find something hidden
- 11 successfully get through baggage checking
- 12 the port or airport where you first enter a country
- 13 people who have escaped from their own country for political reasons
- 14 /əˈsaɪləm/ to request permission to stay in another country to avoid persecution
B. Policing the streets
- The police enforce the law. [make people obey]
- A police officer can stop and search you if there is a suspicion you are carrying drugs, weapons or stolen property. [belief that something may be the case]
- The police cannot normally enter your home against your wishes without a search warrant. [official permission from a judge or magistrate to search a home]
- Many roads have safety/speed cameras to ensure people aren’t exceeding the speed limit. [going faster than the permitted speed]
- Traffic wardens issue parking tickets, with fines for illegal parking. [people whose job it is to make sure drivers do not leave their cars where it is not allowed]
- The police also use surveillance techniques, including CCTV (closed-circuit television) to monitor public areas such as town centres and airports. [television system sending signals to a limited number of screens]
C. Other types of policing
- security forces: often a name for the army and police working together
- plain-clothes police: police who do not wear uniform
- undercover police: police who are working secretly, using a false identity
- drug squad: police specially trained to fight the illegal drug trade
- anti-corruption squad: police specially trained to discover and fight bribery/corruption
- cybercrime: computer crime (there are many types, including cyberterrorism, cyberwarfare, phishing – tricking people on the internet to give up personal information, particularly bank account details)
Common mistakes
Police is a plural word: “ The police are trying to combat crime.”
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