That drones flying over Paris, you almost get used to it ... It's not the first time and certainly not the last. These flying objects not quite identified are more likely to go over sensitive sites of the French capital is still more disturbing. But the most serious is that the security forces themselves recognize their inability to counter the phenomenon. Police sources and experts in aviation security admit that no real parade has yet been found.
The latest flight drones from midnight to about 6:00 this morning, was made almost by a squadron. According to the police on duty in Paris, especially on the alert because of the implementation of Vigipirate, flying machines were at least five. The first was seen around midnight flying over, a few hundred meters, the Embassy of the United States in the eighth arrondissement of Paris. He would have continued on towards the Hotel des Invalides, located in the seventh arrondissement, before disappearing. Then, from two in the morning, four more were spotted near the Eiffel Tower, near the Montparnasse Tower, above the Place de la Concorde, Place de la Bastille, the Interior Ministry ... Well, that highly symbolic places that terrorists of all stripes would gladly hit.
Throughout the night, the police beat the pavement to try to find the mysterious pilot drones but in vain. An investigation was opened by the prosecutor of Paris for "theft by aircraft forbidden zone" and the case is now in the hands of the research section of the Gendarmerie Air Transport, a dozen investigators on deck. They will need to endurance because several previous cases of sensitive sites overflights by drones have still not been resolved. On 20 January, a craft was passed just above the presidential Elysee Palace in central Paris. Nuclear power plants have also been flown and probably the most frightening case, a small drone was spotted during the night of January 28 to 29 near the harbor of Brest which houses the French nuclear submarines launchers of gear. This military site is officially the most protected in France!
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