The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Two arrested in connection to London drone incidents

- By Ellen Milligan and Rupert Rowling

EasyJet plans to largely operate a full schedule of flights from London’s Gatwick Airport and police arrested two people in a nearby town in connection with the drone disruption­s that shut the runway for almost two days, affecting more than 120,000 travelers.

A 47-year-old man and a 54-year-old woman were arrested in Crawley on suspicion of disrupting aviation services to endanger or likely to endanger safety of operations, Sussex Police said in a statement, adding that police operations around the airport would continue. No other details about the individual­s were given.

Flights from the airport south of London resumed at 6:20 p.m. Friday after another reported drone incursion caused a brief interrupti­on. That interrupti­on, which lasted a little over an hour, came as authoritie­s sought to get operations back to normal after a pair of drones disrupted travel for more than 120,000 people over the course of 36 hours.

The airport is Britain’s second busiest and the biggest hub for EasyJet. It is also a focus for long-distance leisure flights by British Airways. Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd., Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA, Thomas Cook and TUI AG are major operators at Gatwick, as well. Ryanair Holdings Plc has a limited presence.

The British Airline Pilots’ Associatio­n said it was “extremely concerned” at the continuing risk of a drone collision and that unauthoriz­ed aircraft could fly around Gatwick’s perimeter or obstruct flight paths.

Almost 50 drone sightings had been reported at the airport during the initial incidents from Wednesday night through Thursday, Sussex police said, though some reports may have been duplicates.

Transport Secretary Chris Grayling told the BBC Friday anti-drone technologi­es had been deployed at Gatwick. “This is an unpreceden­ted event,” he said.

The drone flights were “highly targeted” and designed to deliver maximum disruption in the days before Christmas, according to Gatwick Chief Executive Officer Stewart Wingate.

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