2 arrested in Gatwick Airport drone disruptions - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 06:26 AM | Calgary | -12.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
World

2 arrested in Gatwick Airport drone disruptions

Police in the United Kingdom say they have made two arrests in connection with a drone disruption at London's Gatwick Airport.

Drones have wrought holiday travel chaos for thousands since Wednesday

An information board displays flight information at Gatwick Airport on Friday. Flights were briefly suspended again on Friday night after a drone was spotted near the airfield. (Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images)

Police have arrested a man and awoman after rogue drone operators crippled London's GatwickAirport for three days by repeatedly flying onto the airfield,sparking a major security response.

In a statement, Sussex Policesaid the arrests were made late on Friday. Nogroup has claimed responsibility for the disruption, whichaffected at least 120,000 people on Wednesday and Thursday.

"Our investigations are still on-going, and our activities at the airport continue to build resilience to detect and mitigate further incursions from drones," the statement read.

For two days, drone sightingsnear the airport havewrought travel chaos for hundreds of thousands of holiday travellers, with British authorities so farunable to track down the rogue drone operators.

"While we investigated [Friday night's drone sighting], airfield movements were suspended," a Gatwick spokesperson said."This was a precautionary measure as safety remains our mainpriority. The military measures we have in place at the airporthave provided us with reassurance necessary that it is safe toreopen our airfield."

Drone sightings at Gatwick Britain's second busiest airport have caused the airport's most significant disruptions since a volcanic ash cloud cancelled flights around the world in 2010. The airportsaid some 700 planes were due to take off on Friday, although it warned there would still be delays and cancellations.

An aircraft comes in to land as the runway is re-opened at Gatwick Airport on Friday in London. (Jack Taylor/Getty Images)

Britain called in the military and police snipers on Thursday to hunt down the droneand its operator, who flew what is thought to be an industrial-style drone near the airport every time it tried to reopen.

Fearing the prospect of a deadly collision between a drone and an airliner, authorities first closed the airport's runway on Wednesday nightafter officials spotted two drones near the airfield.

The drone sightings have caused misery for tens of thousands of travellers stranded atGatwick. Many slepton the floor as they searched for alternative routes to holidaygatherings.

Watch:Expert weighs in on the challenges and regulatory hurdles in the world of drones.

Drone expert talks regulations in light of Gatwick incident

6 years ago
Duration 1:38
A drone expert discusses the challenges and regulatory hurdles in the world of drones. Eric Sazcuk is an instructor at the British Columbia Institute of Technology. Tens of thousands of passengers were delayed, diverted or stuck on planes Thursday as the only runway at Britain's Gatwick Airport remained closed into a second day after drones were spotted over the airfield.

'Unprecedented anywhere in the world'

Transport Minister Chris Grayling said there had been about 40 sightings of "a small number of drones" while the airport was shut down. He told the BBC the drone disruption at Gatwick was "unprecedented anywhere in the world."

Grayling lifted night-flying restrictions at other airports to ease congestion caused by diverted aircraft.

Police Detective Chief Supt. Jason Tingley said "our assessment, based upon the information that we have available to us, is that this incident is not terrorism related."

Passengers waiting Friday to check in at Gatwick's South Terminal building faced the longest delays seen there in several years. (Toby Melville/Reuters)

The British military has joined police and aviation authorities in the search for the culprit or culprits behind the drone intrusion, which police said was designed to cause maximum disruption over the holiday period.

Richard Parker, head of the air traffic management technology firm Altitude Angel, said this was the first time a major airport had been hit by such a sustained and deliberate incursion into its airspace.

"It's sophisticated not from a technology side, but it's organized. People have charged lots of batteriesand are deliberately trying to avoid being caught, probably by driving around to different locations," Parkersaid.

Watch: See the chaos atGatwickduring the delays.

The British Airline Pilots' Association said it understood "detection and tracking equipment" hasbeen installed around Gatwick's perimeter since the drone intrusion.

The Defence Ministry refused to comment on what technology was deployed, but drone experts said airports needed to deploy specializedradar reinforced by thermal imaging technology to detect such unmanned flying vehicles.

With a surge in public enthusiasm for drones, there has been an increase in near-collisions by unmanned aircraft and commercial jets in recent years.

Reported"airprox" incidents involvingprivate drones and other aircraft in Britain have more than quadrupled in the last four years, with 117 incidents already recorded in 2018, according to the U.K.Airprox Board regulator. Airprox reports are filed in the U.K. when pilots or air traffic controllers feel the distance between two aircraft could compromise safety.

It is illegal to fly drones within one kilometre of a British airport boundary. Flying a drone near an airport carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison.

Gatwick, which competes with Europe's busiest airport Heathrow, west of London, had said Sunday would be its busiest day of the festive period.

The airport, about 45 kilometressouth of central London, sees more than 43 million passengers a year. About 110,000 had been scheduled to pass through on Thursday.

With files from The Associated Press and CBC's Briar Stewart