Wednesday, 6 August 2008

Unmanned spy planes to police Britain.

Unmanned spy planes to police Britain

By Kim Sengupta
Wednesday, 6 August 2008

The Government is drawing up plans to use unmanned "drone" aircraft
currently deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan to counter terrorism and aid
police operations in Britain.

The MoD is carrying out research and development to enable the spy
planes, which are equipped with highly sophisticated monitoring
equipment that allows them to secretly track and photograph suspects
without their knowledge, to be deployed within three years.

The plans have been backed by the House of Commons Defence Committee but
have attracted criticism from civil liberties campaigners concerned
about the implications of covert surveillance of civilians.

The unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) can obtain clear images while flying
at up to 50,000ft. If ministers give the scheme the go-ahead the UK will
be among the first countries to use UAVs to monitor its own citizens.

The Israeli military operates them over Palestinian cities such as Gaza
and Ramallah, while the US Customs and Border Protection agency flies
them over the Mexican border to detect illegal migrants along specified
routes.

Gareth Crossman, director of policy at the civil rights watchdog
Liberty, said: "The question is not so much about the technology but
what one does with it. We have quite definite laws about where CCTV can
be used but of course with UAVs you have much greater ability to gather
material in private spaces and this would lead to concern."

He added: "If they are used to simply hover to gain random information
then that would obviously be a matter of worry and a civil liberty
issue."

UAVs are currently restricted to military installations in Salisbury
Plain because of regulations banning them from using the same airspace
as civil aircraft. However, a commercial consortium led by BAE Systems
will provide the safety measures necessary for the planes to fly over
the UK within three years.

The MPs' report says the MoD is "closely involved with the development
of procedures and regulations which allow UAVs to operate in national
and Nato airspace. But the committee indicates that the ministry should
do more."

The BAE Systems consortium is partly funded by a number of government
agencies, but not the MoD, which has an observer status on the project,
called the Astraea programme. The next stage of the project is due to
cost £44m, with private companies providing half of that.

The committee says: "In the response to our report we expect the MoD to
set out why it supports the Astraea programme only in an 'observer role'
and its future plans with regard to this programme."

The MPs say full consideration should be given to evidence given to the
committee by a weapons company that meeting the air safety requirements
would open the way for UAVs to be used in disaster relief, crowd
control, anti-terror surveillance, maritime searches and support for the
Coastguard, police, fire and intelligence services.

The UAVs will give law enforcement agencies huge scope for surveillance.
Robert Emerson, a security analyst who specialises in deciphering aerial
images, said: "Satellite images can be affected by clouds and lack of
light, with UAVs you can avoid that by choosing the height at which you
fly. There is now also Google Earth, but these are often old images out
of date. There is tremendous potential in material gathered by UAVs."

He added: "There will obviously be implications for privacy, human
rights, etc. That is something the Government will have to address and I
imagine that there will be protests from some quarters. But you
certainly cannot blame police and intelligence services for wanting to
use them."

There are also concerns over safety, however. In April 2006 a UAV used
by US Customs and Border Protection crashed in Arizona when its engine
was accidentally turned off by the team piloting it. At the end of the
first investigation into an un-manned aircraft accident, America's
National Transportation Safety Board issued 22 recommendations and its
chairman talked of a "wide range of safety issues involving the civilian
use of unmanned aircraft".

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/unmanned-spy-planes-to-
police-britain-886083.html
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