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Hundreds of UK drones ‘missing’ in Iraq and Afghanistan

Hundreds of UK drones ‘missing’ in Iraq and AfghanistanGet short URLLink copied to clipboardemail story to a friendprint versionPublished: 13 February, 2013, 17:01

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Reuters / Luke MacGregor Britain has lost 447 of its military drones in Iraq and Afghanistan. The aircraft have crashed, broken down or gone missing during operations, adding to international outrage over civilian deaths and debate over the safety of their use in Britain.­Many have not been replaced and are lost for good, costing the UK millions. An MOD official stated that no deaths or injuries have resulted from the drone losses. However, the smaller drones which are more liable to crashing are similar to those which may be introduced into UK airspace, prompting safety concerns alongside existing fears of privacy violations. The contentious issue of continued drone usage by Western forces sparked an outcry from a UK watchdog. “The drone industry constantly talks up the supposed economic benefits of unmanned drones, but it is the civil liberties and safety implications that need real attention,” Chris Cole, founder of watchdog website Drone Wars UK told the Guardian. The overall number of civilian deaths caused by drone strikes abroad has been difficult to confirm. However, estimates by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism reported 2,562 to 3,325 deaths from drone strikes in Pakistan, including 474 to 881 civilian deaths. Drone strikes were responsible for the deaths of 531 to 779 people, with a civilian casualty rate between 4 percent and 8.5 percent as of June 2012, according to a report by the New America Foundation. Both statistics were laid out in a 2012 report by the Human Rights Clinic at Columbia Law School and the Center for Civilians in Conflict.The impact of strikes in other aspects of civilian life has been severe, harming not only the individual, but their families, friends and neighbors. “Covert drone strikes cause other kinds of harm to civilians and local communities,” the report said.  Militant groups can pursue retaliatory attacks against those they suspect of being informants, a kind of harm not always reported on by the press.In January of this year, the UN began an investigation into US and UK drone attacks, the resulting civilian casualties and the drone program’s legal implications. The UN will examine the use of UAVs in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia, and will publish its findings next autumn. UN special Rapporteur Ben Emmerson told the Guardian newspaper in January that “one of the questions we will be looking at is whether, given the local demography, aerial attacks carry too high a risk of a disproportionate number of civilian casualties.”UK’s ‘Eye in the Sky’UK plans to open its airspace to unmanned surveillance vehicles has been met with great resistance, and fears of an ‘eye in the sky’ have been rampant in British media. By August 2012, the UK’s airspace regulator, the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), had already handed out 120 permits for the smaller drone models. “According to our analysis, there have been more than 100 crashes of the larger class of military unmanned aerial vehicles in over 20 countries since 2007,” Cole told the Guardian. “However, it is likely that it is the smaller class of drones – less than 150kg – that will be used most often in civil airspace and the revelation that over 400 British drones of this type have crashed in Afghanistan is startling.””);
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­The UK’s Ministry of Defence (MOD) has reported that the loss of 447 unmanned drones was due to technical faults, controller error or not wanting to remove them from volatile enemy areas, according to the Guardian newspaper.Small handheld devices, large UAVs, and a missile-carrying drone were all lost in the last five years. ­UK drones lost in Afghanistan and Iraq- Desert Hawk 3 – Small, handheld UAV; 412 have crashed or been lost. – Tarantula Hawk and Black Hornet miniature surveillance he
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licopter – Mini UAVs; 25 have been lost.- Reaper drone – Hellfire missile-carrying drone; one has been lost, costing over $15mn.- Hermes 450 – Large UAV; nine have been lost, costing $1.5mn each. ­Many have not been replaced and are lost for good, costing the UK millions. An MOD official stated that no deaths or injuries have resulted from the drone losses. However, the smaller drones which are more liable to crashing are similar to those which may be introduced into UK airspace, prompting safety concerns alongside existing fears of privacy violations. The contentious issue of continued drone usage by Western forces sparked an outcry from a UK watchdog. “The drone industry constantly talks up the supposed economic benefits of unmanned drones, but it is the civil liberties and safety implications that need real attention,” Chris Cole, founder of watchdog website Drone Wars UK told the Guardian. The overall number of civilian deaths caused by drone strikes abroad has been difficult to confirm. However, estimates by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism reported 2,562 to 3,325 deaths from drone strikes in Pakistan, including 474 to 881 civilian deaths. Drone strikes were responsible for the deaths of 531 to 779 people, with a civilian casualty rate between 4 percent and 8.5 percent as of June 2012, according to a report by the New America Foundation. Both statistics were laid out in a 2012 report by the Human Rights Clinic at Columbia Law School and the Center for Civilians in Conflict.The impact of strikes in other aspects of civilian life has been severe, harming not only the individual, but their families, friends and neighbors. “Covert drone strikes cause other kinds of harm to civilians and local communities,” the report said.  Militant groups can pursue retaliatory attacks against those they suspect of being informants, a kind of harm not always reported on by the press.In January of this year, the UN began an investigation into US and UK drone attacks, the resulting civilian casualties and the drone program’s legal implications. The UN will examine the use of UAVs in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia, and will publish its findings next autumn. UN special Rapporteur Ben Emmerson told the Guardian newspaper in January that “one of the questions we will be looking at is whether, given the local demography, aerial attacks carry too high a risk of a disproportionate number of civilian casualties.”UK’s ‘Eye in the Sky’UK plans to open its airspace to unmanned surveillance vehicles has been met with great resistance, and fears of an ‘eye in the sky’ have been rampant in British media. By August 2012, the UK’s airspace regulator, the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), had already handed out 120 permits for the smaller drone models. “According to our analysis, there have been more than 100 crashes of the larger class of military unmanned aerial vehicles in over 20 countries since 2007,” Cole told the Guardian. “However, it is likely that it is the smaller class of drones – less than 150kg – that will be used most often in civil airspace and the revelation that over 400 British drones of this type have crashed in Afghanistan is startling.” Read More

Forty years later, Garfunkel explains troubled waters with Simon

Art Garfunkel, now 71 years old and still reeling decades later from the breakup of the musical act that made him a household name, is now saying that one of the reasons Simon & Garfunkel broke up was because of Mike Nichols’s 1970 film adaptation of Joseph Heller’s “Catch-22.” In the late 1960s, he says, the two were cast in the film, and while Garfunkel managed to hold on to his fourth billing role, Simon ended up on the cutting room floor, reports the Guardian.

Garfunkel was speaking at the Paley Center for Media in New York last Wednesday, as part of a screening of Charles Grodin’s 1969 Simon & Garfunkel documentary “Songs of America.” According to the Hollywood Reporter, both the singer and Grodin implicated Nichols. Recall that Nichols featured Simon & Garfunkel’s “Mrs. Robinson” and “Scarborough Fair” in “The Graduate,” his now-iconic 1967 film that won him an Oscar for best director.

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It looks British comedian Ricky Gervais may have been deemed too offensive yet again. This time, it’s not “The Office” creator’s remarks, but his new sitcom on BBC2, “Life’s Too Short.” Despite earlier reports that a second season was in the works, The Guardian reports that BBC2 will not be continuing the show, which aired only six episodes beginning in Nov. 2011.

Instead, the network plans to air a one-hour long episode starring Val Kilmer. ”It will make a nice change from working on The Muppet Movie opposite weird little things with squeaky voices,” joked Gervais.

Gervais has two other comedies under his control, however: “Derek,” currently on-air, and he’s working on a new stand-up show as well.

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