Drones have appeared over landmarks
in central Paris for the second night running and police are no closer
to knowing who is operating them.
There were five sightings between 23:00 on Tuesday and 02:00 (01:00 GMT) on Wednesday, French media report.
Up to three drones were seen near the Invalides military museum, Place de la Concorde and two of the old city gates.
Flying drones over Paris at night is illegal and daytime flights require authorisation from the city.
Five
drones were seen the previous night in similar areas, including the
Eiffel Tower and above the US embassy, close to Place de la Concorde.
However,
some of the latest drone flights have been captured on film and will be
analysed by a 10-strong team of investigators set up after the first
incidents.
The new sightings were also on the fringes of central Paris, at the
key transport gates of Porte de Clignancourt in the north and Porte de
Saint-Cloud in the south-west.
Small drones are inexpensive and
easy to buy but their appearance in recent months over sensitive
locations has worried French authorities.
It is against the law
for any aircraft to fly lower than 6,000m (19,700ft) over central Paris.
Flying any aircraft under that ceiling - including drones, police
helicopters and air ambulances - requires permission from city
authorities.
Flying a drone at night is banned completely.
Analysis: Hugh Schofield, Paris correspondent
The
security threat from these drones is minimal. Bird's-eye images of
Paris landmarks are available online in far higher quality than anything
these devices could produce. And small, shop-bought drones are not
strong enough to deliver a significant payload of explosives.
The more likely risk from these drones is that one might get out of
control and crash onto a street, injuring a pedestrian or causing a car
accident. That is the main reason why flying drones is banned over
populated areas of France.
The police cannot afford to ignore
these overflights however. They are probably the work of drone
enthusiasts giving the authorities the run-around, but not certainly. It
could also be an organised group - eco-warriors or jihadists, for
example - testing out how the security forces respond to drones. Last
month a drone was seen over the Elysee Palace, home of President
Francois Hollande and in October last year, a 24-year-old Israeli
tourist was fined €400 (£293; $453) and spent a night in jail after
flying a drone over the city's historic Hotel Dieu hospital and a police
station.
Drones were also spotted flying over at least 13 nuclear power plants in France between October 2014 and January 2015.
Those flights were thought to be the work of environmental activists but no group claimed responsibility.
Drones
present a problem for authorities in built-up areas, in that shooting
them down could endanger the public. It is possible to jam GPS or radio
signals guiding them.
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