Employees of Russian Railways, together with volunteers from the National Center for Assistance to Missing and Injured Children, conducted joint training at the railway stations of St. Petersburg and Kazan. During the exercises, modern technologies were used, including facial recognition systems and data from electronic tickets.
Different scenarios were used in each city. For example, volunteers were looking for a runaway child, focusing on his payment receipts at the station's food point. This scenario made it possible to find out how operational services are ready to coordinate efforts to search for children.
Note that over the past year, volunteers have been able to return almost 700 children, thanks to the work of a unified information exchange platform. And over the past six months, community members have found about 1,500 missing children.
Read more on the topic:
A new railway station will appear in Moscow City
Railway stations in Russia will be equipped with free wi-fi
New measures to protect railway stations from UAVs have been approved in Russia