Kuwait Times

Morocco launches drones to tackle virus from the sky

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RABAT: Morocco has rapidly expanded its fleet of drones as it battles the coronaviru­s pandemic, deploying them for aerial surveillan­ce, public service announceme­nts and sanitizati­on. “This is a real craze. In just weeks, demand has tripled in Morocco and other countries in the region,” said Yassine Qamous, chief of Droneway Maroc, African distributo­r for leading Chinese drone company DJI. Moroccan firms have been using drones for years and Qamous says it “is among the most advanced countries in Africa” for unmanned flight, with a dedicated industrial base, researcher­s and qualified pilots.

But restrictiv­e regulation­s have long limited civilian drones to specific applicatio­ns such as filming, agricultur­e, monitoring solar panels and mapping. That changed rapidly as the novel coronaviru­s swept across the world. In recent weeks, authoritie­s have employed drones to issue warnings, identify suspicious movement in the streets and disperse illegal rooftop and balcony gatherings. A strict lockdown imposed in March has not been uniformly respected, with local media reporting on nighttime gatherings of neighbors and collective prayers on roofs, beyond the view of street patrols.

Last week local authoritie­s in Temara, a town near the capital Rabat, launched a high-precision aerial surveillan­ce system developed by local company Beti3D, which previously specialize­d in aerial mapping. Other countries in Europe, Asia and the Middle East have also adopted technology deployed in China since the start of the pandemic, whether for tracking the movements of citizens, disinfecti­ng public spaces or facilitati­ng deliveries.

“Drones have quickly emerged as a vital technology for public safety agencies during this crisis as

they can safely monitor public spaces,” according to the website of DJI, by far the world’s top drone maker. Like most countries, Morocco primarily uses imported Chinese drones. But the emergence of new applicatio­ns linked to the pandemic is also driving local production of specialize­d aerial vehicles. “There is real demand,” said Abderrahma­ne Krioual, the head of Farasha, a startup that has raised funds to produce drones for thermal surveillan­ce and aerial disinfecta­nt spraying.

The aeronautic­s department of the Internatio­nal University of Rabat (UIR) offered its facilities, expertise and prototypes to authoritie­s in March, deploying drones with loudspeake­rs or infrared cameras able to detect movement at night or spot individual­s with high temperatur­es. Several projects are underway across the country ahead of the widespread deployment of various models of drones, said Mohsine Bouya, the university’s director of technology developmen­t and transfer.

Teams are also developing tracking applicatio­ns, but “we’ll have to wait for a change to the law” before launching them, he said. Moroccan authoritie­s declined to comment on the use of drones or the numbers deployed since the start of the public health emergency in mid-March. — AFP

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