The Borneo Post

British police scramble for clues in London airport drone chaos

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LONDON: Bri t i sh pol ic e scrambled for answers Sunday after releasing their only suspects in the London Gatwick Airport drone mystery that brought Christmas getaway f lights to a standstill.

Nearly 140,000 passengers were affected over three days of disruption Wednesday through Friday as Britain’s second-busiest airport shut down because of repeated reports of drone sightings.

A damaged drone found near the airport was being forensical­ly examined, police said, but it was not immediatel­y clear whether it was connected to the sightings.

Police admitted there was a possibilit­y that no drones had in fact hovered over the airport as they were relying on eyewitness accounts.

Police arrested a 47-year- old man and a 54-year- old woman from the town of Crawley, near Gatwick, on Friday after a tip- off but released them without charge on Sunday.

“Both people have f u l ly cooperated with our enquiries and I am satisfied that they are no longer suspects in the drone incidents at Gatwick,” said Sussex Police detective chief superinten­dent Jason Tingley.

“We are not back to square one,” he said, adding that officers were looking at ‘persons of interest’.

He said that the detectives were investigat­ing 67 reports of drone sightings from the public, police officers and airport staff.

They were also conducting a forensic examinatio­n of the damaged drone found near the airport perimetre, close to the location of the last reported sighting, Tingley said.

Asked about speculatio­n that there never was a drone over the airport, he said: “Of course, that’s a possibilit­y. We are working with human beings saying they have seen something.”

He added : “Our i nqui r y continues at a pace to locate those responsibl­e for the drone incursions.”

The dangers posed by drones include the possibilit­y of a device smashing into a passenger plane or being sucked into an engine where its highly f lammable lithium battery could cause a catastroph­e.

The airport has of fered a US$ 50,000 ( US$ 63,000) reward for informatio­n leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsibl­e for the disruption.

Tingley said the two arrests came after a tip-off from a member of the public, adding that he appreciate­d the released pair’s cooperatio­n in the investigat­ion.

Pictures of the Crawley couple were splashed across Sunday’s newspapers, with headlines including “Are these the morons who ruined Christmas?”

While the man was a model helicopter enthusiast, reports inside quoted his astonished boss as saying he could vouch for him having actually been at work throughout the drama.

Under recently introduced laws in Britain, drones cannot be flown near aircraft or within a kilometre of an airport, or at an altitude of over 120 metres.

Violators face up to five years in prison for endangerin­g an aircraft. — AFP

 ??  ?? A man dressed as Santa Claus, or Father Christmas, leaves for his long Christmas journey from the Santa’s Village at the Arctic Circle in Finnish Lapland on Dec 23. — Reuters photo
A man dressed as Santa Claus, or Father Christmas, leaves for his long Christmas journey from the Santa’s Village at the Arctic Circle in Finnish Lapland on Dec 23. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? A man and a woman are seen entering a home after being released without charge in an inquiry into the illegal use of drones at London’s Gatwick Airport, in Crawley. — Reuters photo
A man and a woman are seen entering a home after being released without charge in an inquiry into the illegal use of drones at London’s Gatwick Airport, in Crawley. — Reuters photo

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