Sixteen Moldovan border crossing points and 11 police stations will be outfitted with special equipment for obtaining real-time access to the Interpol databases on wanted persons, stolen and lost travel documents and stolen motor vehicles, within a project supported by the OSCE, Info-Prim Neo reports. The project was launched in Chisinau on April 28, in the presence of the Head of the OSCE Action against Terrorism Unit Raphael Perl. During two days, the foreign expert will give training courses on database access and use for senior officials of the Border Guard Service at the head office of the OSCE Mission in Moldova. “The persons travel more and more and the borders disappear for a free movement. In such a world, you never know who enters and leaves the country,” Raphael Perl told a news conference. According to Raphael Perl, the Interpol and the OSCE started to cooperate with the Border Guard Service of Moldova in 2007. The €210,00 project will enable to purchase 51 working stations for 16 border crossing points, a server and other equipment needed to identify forged documents, wanted persons and stolen vehicles. The head of the Border Guard Service Alexei Roibu said that eight control points, which are located mainly at the border with Romania, have such equipment that can read biometric data. According to him, when the process of demarcating the Moldovan-Ukrainian state border is finished, the eastern border crossing points will also be outfitted with such equipment. The project will be implemented by the Border Guard Service in cooperation with the Ministry of Information and Communication Technology, the Interpol Office in Chisinau and the Ministry of the Interior.