By ANTARA News
Sydney : Laser pointers could be declared prohibited weapons in Australia after a series of “attacks” on pilots of airliners coming in to land at Sydney airport, officials said Wednesday.
In the worst incident, six aircraft had to alter their flight paths last Friday after their cockpits were targeted in coordinated assaults by four green lasers over 15 minutes.
“My (police) minister is examining making these things prohibited weapons,” said New South Wales premier Morris Iemma.
“These fools think it’s a joke — it’s not a joke if you end up blinding a pilot, bringing a plane down, and potentially killing dozens if not hundreds of people on the plane and on the ground. This could be mass murder.”
Federal government agencies began meeting with police on Wednesday to produce recommendations by Friday on how to curb laser attacks on aeroplanes, said Home Affairs Minister Bob Debus, noting a fresh incident on Tuesday night.
“The attack on an aeroplane from Cairns to Sydney last night adds renewed urgency to the concern of the government,” Debus told reporters in Sydney.
“We are in fact dealing with a new kind of very destructive behaviour.”
Civil Aviation Safety Authority spokesman Peter Gibson said the coordinated incident last Friday was particularly worrying.
“Normally we just get one and it is intermittent,” he said. “It is happening probably five or six times a week, so almost every day somewhere around Australia someone is pointing a laser at an aircraft.
“Unfortunately it is not amusing. It is in fact serious.”
Gibson said some pilots had reported being temporarily blinded and feeling unwell after being hit by the light.
“They certainly dazzle you, and you have the potential for being temporarily blinded if you caught one flush in the eye,” he said.
Laser pointers are hand-held devices, often no bigger than a pen, usually used to highlight areas of interest in presentations in schools or businesses.
The power of the laser beams varies, with a milliwatt and under being legal in most Australian states, but they can be bought over the Internet at up to 50 milliwatts or more, said laser dealer John Bowen.
But even with those it would be difficult to blind a pilot at a distance when he was in a rapidly moving aircraft, Bowen, product manager for laser
distributor Lastek, told AFP.
“The claim that the conventional hand-held laser pointer that any Joe Blow could buy over the Web could bring down a plane by blinding the pilot I think has been exaggerated,” he said.
Professor Norman Heckenberg, of the University of Queensland’s laser science centre, also said the common laser pointers would be unlikely to be dangerous.