The Sun (Malaysia)

China firm develops ‘laser gun’

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BEIJING: A Chinese firm has developed a laser gun designed for police use that can set fire to protesters’ hair or banners from a range of almost 1km.

The general manager of the ZKZM fibre laser company, who asked to remain anonymous, said the weapon would “immediatel­y” produce a “strong pain response” in the target but stressed it was designed to be “non-lethal”.

“The weapon is designed to do things such as setting fire to illegal banners at a protest or setting fire to the hair or clothing of a protester,” he said.

“It is not designed explicitly for killing like a gun that uses bullets and cannot cause the ‘instant carbonisat­ion’ of human skin and tissues,” he added.

The 15mm calibre weapon weighs 3kg, has a range of 800m and can pass through glass and other transparen­t obstacles.

It can be mounted on cars, boats and planes, the firm said, adding it was “seeking a partner that has a weapons production licence or a partner in the security or defence industry to start largescale production”.

It is “mainly expected to be for Chinese police use”, the manager said.

He said it would need to be upgraded to a “laser cannon” – with increased power – to become lethal and confirmed his firm was working on such a weapon.

But he noted there was an internatio­nal agreement not to develop killer lasers and said any such weapons would be “inhumane ... the pain would be unimaginab­le”.

Some experts are sceptical of the company’s claim, saying laser weaponry is still a matter of science fiction.

Specialist website Techcrunch noted that “laser weaponry capable of real harm has eluded the eager boffins of the world’s militaries for several reasons”.

“The power required to set a person aflame instantly from half a mile away is truly huge,” the website stressed.

“The idea of one that weighs a handful of pounds and fires hundreds of instantly skin-searing shots is just infeasible today.”

Developmen­t of such laser weapons is not limited to China, with all the big defence players in the US working on prototypes for the Pentagon.

Last year, Lockheed Martin announced a 60-kilowatt laser weapon that is invisible to the naked eye and will be deployed against mortars and small drones. – AFP

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