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They Live Taser Saucer To Become A Reality
UN declares stun guns to be instruments of torture while
Taser rep says "it's not real pain" and puts
drone craft into development
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One of the biggest Taser representatives outside the US base has
declared the company's intention to produce and sell internationally
a small airborne drone version of the weapon that can administer
electrical jolts of 50,000 volts.
Antoine di Zazzo has told the
AFP that his French company is "developing a
mini-flying saucer like drone which could also fire Taser stun
rounds on criminal suspects or rioting crowds. He expects it to
be launched next year and to be sold internationally by Taser."
The idea conjures up memories of the flying saucer spy drones
from the 1988 dystopian cult classic movie They
Live. The opening of George Orwell's Nineteen
Eighty Four also features the idea of police flying overhead
and snooping into homes. Now this nightmare vision is set to become
reality.
With 250,000 Taser stun guns in use all over the
world from North America, Australia, Britain, Canada, France,
Germany, Australia, Singapore and New Zealand, to name just a
few of 70 or so countries, it hardly takes a stretch of the imagination
to foresee the take up of Taser's airborne drones.
In addition we have also seen moves by police forces
around the world to test and use flying drones. Most recently
controversy was raised after it was discovered that Houston police
have been secretly testing spy drones that use a high-powered
cameras designed to look into buildings or even follow people
in moving cars.
Drone Planes are not new to the United States. The
military has been using drones for secret war zone surveillance
for years; drones were also used to put out the California wildfires
last month. The drones used for the test in Houston weigh only
40 pounds, but can carry 15 pounds more in gear. They are able
to stay airborne 15 to 24 hours without landing.
Reports from June indicated that the Department
of Homeland Security used a spy drone to stake out
the property of income tax protestors Ed and Elaine Brown before
they were arrested in September. In April the British
press reported on a British amateur inventor who
won a contract with the US government for a 3ft-wide flying saucer
contraption, a cross between a hovercraft and a helicopter, which
is being considered as a surveillance tool.
We have also recently seen drones used to keep tabs
on concert
goers in Britain. Such devices have since been
deployed by police in areas of the UK for "tackling
anti-social behaviour and public disorder". Other
reports have highlighted interest in drones and testing
by police departments nationwide. Some protestors are even adamant
that they have witnessed
tiny insect like drones in deployment at anti war
rallies. Such creations are certainly
in development if not already in deployment.
(Article continues below)
Taser has been mired in controversy, since the wide
uptake of its stun guns by police forces, due to the level of
pain the devices inflict and the amount of deaths that have occurred
after their use. Last week a perfectly healthy 20
year old man died in police custody after being shocked
with a taser. Another 36-year-old
man died Saturday five days after an altercation
with police who used a Taser to subdue him. Last month a Polish
man was killed at Vancouver airport after being stunned
up to 4 times.
Further questions have been raised over more frequent
police use of tasers. The guns are supposed to be the last response
before lethal action, however, we have increasingly reported cases
where police use them without warning and in non threatening situations.
Amnesty International has said there have been about
300 deaths around the world after Taser use and has called for
it to be suspended while a full investigation into the impact
is conducted.
On Friday, a UN Committee said the stun gun "causes acute
pain, constituting a
form of torture".
Despite this Antoine di Zazzo of Taser International
says that no death has been attributed to the use of the gun and
that the controversy is caused by misunderstanding of new technology.
When asked about the UN verdict on the weapons
di Zazzo replied "You cannot call it real pain," and
added that far from causing death, the gun "saves lives".
How long will it be before small flying saucer drones
are zipping around our cities zapping people in order to "save
lives"?
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