Union Home Secretary Rajiv Mehrishi said there was a need for regulating Unmanned Aerial Vehicles to prevent its misuse, particularly in populated areas and sensitive locations like airports.
"We need to go into regulations. We need to have a system to detect and destruct rouge aircraft... We have to ensure that UAVs are not hijacked by rouge elements and misused," he said addressing a seminar on 'India's Internal Security and UAVs'.
"That is an evolving technology. People are still getting into it, how to do what to do, how to destroy them. It is difficult for UAVs as it has very little footprints. If it is detected in a populated areas or in an airport or in a runway, we don't know what would be the impact of its destruction. We really don't aware what would be the consequences," he said.
Mehrishi said putting in place certain regulations in operating UAVs have two aspects -- preventive and enabling -- and the government was working on both.
the option of using UAVs for works like surveillance in large establishments such as refineries, secure oil pipelines from being broken or stolen, crime detection etc.
"One positive side of the homeland security (of the use of UAVs), whether to send relief in a disaster situation, how to send medicine, delivery of food, whether it is for traffic management and probably detection of crime.
"So, homeland security is an issue we have to look forward. We are in the Home Ministry ....Little concern about certain things in homeland security. We are currently doing that...Including the issue of infiltration from the western side of the border from the hostile neighbour," he said.
"One important aspects for us is to reduce boots on the ground. We are also using technology intensively so that we ensure security and less personnel on the ground," he said.
The Home Secretary said there was a need for homeland security specific facilities such as how to detect ungrounded mines where our security forces are exposed to in certain areas of the country.
Addressing the seminar, Air Marshal V R Chaudhary strongly pitched for bringing UAVs and all low flying objects under the ambit of some rules and regulations as they were "security threat".
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