Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

DRY RUN FOR SECURITY TECH AS NEW DRONE POLICY NEARS

- Faizan Haidar faizan.haider@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: Security agencies will test anti-drone devices in Delhi from next month with the Union civil aviation ministry working on a policy to legalise the use of unmanned aerial vehicles for various recreation­al and commercial purposes, a government official familiar with the matter said on Tuesday.

The ministry has identified several technologi­es, including devices that can capture drones mid-flight and devices that can hack into drones and block their communicat­ion systems, the official added.

Even after the law to allow drones is put in place, flying them will be prohibited in sensitive areas such as Vijay Chowk -including the President’s Estate, Parliament, the Prime Minister’s House, and North and South Blocks -- and within five kilometres of the Delhi airport.

“The civil aviation ministry has invited different companies to showcase technologi­es which can neutralise drones, if needed,” said an officer from the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF). “We have already been briefed about a bullet that has a net attached to it,” added the officer, who asked not to be named.

“The possibilit­y of drones being misused cannot be ruled out. We need to see if a drone is carrying any explosive, then can security agencies control it,” said another CISF officer posted at Delhi airport. Since drones are typically handled by an operator through a remote-controlled device, the ministry wants equipment that will not only block the drone’s communicat­ions but also trace the operator.

Apart from these devices, the government plans to keep a standby helicopter that can be used by CISF and National Security Guard (NSG) commandos to shoot down a drone that enters prohibited airspace or appears to be a threat.

The civil aviation ministry has come up with a draft regulation allowing the use of drones, but with restrictio­ns. It has defined no-drone zones in cities and at internatio­nal borders, and has added a clause in which the commercial use of drones requires permission­s from the aviation regulator. The draft is open for public consultati­on and suggestion­s at the moment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India