Glossary
Name | Description |
---|---|
SIS alert | A ‘SIS alert’ means a set of data entered into SIS allowing the competent authorities to identify a person or an object with a view to taking specific action. |
SIS non-sensitive/non-police alert | The SIS ‘non-sensitive alerts’ or ‘non-police alerts’ concern: |
SIS sensitive/police alert | The SIS ‘sensitive/police alerts' concern: |
SIS-AFIS | Schengen Information System-Automatic Fingerprint Identification System |
SIS-AFIS notification | According to the specific type of operation, the notification is: sent to the Member State that entered the last new alert in SIS, and to other involved Member States, if they subscribed to the service or sent to the mark issuing Member State and to the Member State that entered the last new alert, if the latter subscribed to the service or sent to the executing Member State and to the mark issuing Member State, if the latter subscribed to the service. |
SIS-SIRENE Committee | The Commission is responsible for the general oversight of SIS and works with the Member States, eu-LISA and other Union agencies in managing the evaluation of the system and to adopt implementing measures. The body that supports the Commission in these tasks is the SIS-SIRENE Committee, in which all Member States are represented. Its role is to assist the Commission in drafting and adopting implementing acts that set common standards and procedures on the operation of SIS in accordance with the examination procedure. The SIS-SIRENE Committee also discusses and agrees on technical and operational matters. |
specific check | A specific action to be taken on the basis of the alert if national law so allows. If allowed, the end user is required to take action which is similar to what would normally be categorised under national law as a ‘stop and search’ and therefore the subject must be given all the procedural rights to which they are entitled under national law. A specific check involves a thorough search of the described person, any vehicle they might be using, the persons accompanying the subject, luggage and other objects. It also involves gathering the same information as a discreet check or inquiry checks. |
Stamping | Use of stamps in travel documents (e.g. passport), which must be checked by the competent authorities of a Member State. The affixing of stamps related with EES occurs during the fall-back procedures and during the EES’s transitional period. |
Standard form for refusal of entry | A standard form to be filled at the border crossing point, by the border authority, as per the Schengen Borders Code Regulation (EU) 2016/399. |
Stolen and Lost Travel Documents (SLTD) | Stolen and Lost Travel Documents (SLTD): A Interpol database containing lost, stolen and revoked travel documents – such as passports, identity cards, visas and UN laissez-passer– and also stolen blank travel documents included in a database that helps police to catch terrorists and criminals who often use fraudulent travel documents to cross borders. |