Unidentified
drones have been spotted flying above Paris for a second night, after
'at least' five were spotted illegally flying around city landmarks on
Monday, sparking a terror alert.
Drones
were seen on Monday buzzing the Eiffel Tower, Bastille Square and the
U.S. embassy building. Unmanned aircraft were also spotted flying
overnight on Monday near the French capital's Place de la Concorde and
the Invalides military museum, where Napoleon Bonaparte is buried.
French
security sources where unable to catch the operators of the drones,
which are typically fitted with video recording equipment and can be
used for surveillance of a terror target to assess security levels and
any spikes in pedestrian footfall ahead of a planned attack.
Between then
and 6am the Eiffel Tower, Bastille Square, the Place de la Concorde and
the Invalides military museum 'were also flown over' , a security
source said.
'It could be a coordinated action but we don't know for now,' the source, who asked not to be identified, added.
'We did everything to try and catch the operators but they were not found,' another source close to the investigation said.
France
has experienced a series of mysterious drone appearances in the last
few months. On January 20, a pilotless aircraft briefly went over the
presidential palace in Paris, while around 20 drones were earlier seen
flying above nuclear power plants.
However until Tuesday 'there have never been so many drones appearing in one night,' the security source said.
The
emergence of drones comes amid warnings by terrorist groups that they
will attack the city, following January shootings which left a total of
20 dead, including three terrorists.
‘They could be seen throughout the night, but nobody knows who were operating them,’ said a police source in the capital.
A specialist police aviation unit tried to establish who was at the controls, but there have been no arrests.
There
have been other mysterious drone flights across Paris, but this is the
first time that such a concentrated number have been seen above so many
potentially vulnerable targets.
The US embassy has been threatened by numerous groups in the past, from Al-Qaeda to Algeria’s Armed Islamic Group.
French
law bans small, civilian drones from areas such as nuclear facilities,
which are protected by a no-fly zone that spans a 1.6-mile radius and a
height of 1,000 metres.
Experts say that the small unmanned craft would not pose a threat if crashed into a hardened nuclear facility.
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