France bans use of drones to police protests in Paris

France bans use of drones to police protests in Paris
# 23 December 2020 09:23 (UTC +04:00)

France's top administrative court has backed privacy campaigners by imposing a ban on police use of drones for covering public protests in Paris, APA reports citing BBC.

The Council of State said Paris police prefect Didier Lallement should halt "without delay" drone surveillance of gatherings on public roads.

The move comes as parliament discusses a contentious security bill that includes police use of drones.

Its main aim is to regulate how people share film or photos of police.

Privacy rights group La Quadrature du Net (LQDN) has argued that the bill's main measures violate freedom of expression and that drones equipped with cameras cannot keep the peace but track individuals instead.

The Council of State ruled there was "serious doubt over the legality" of drones without a prior text authorising and setting out their use. LQDN said the only way the government could legalise drone surveillance now was in providing "impossible proof" that it was absolutely necessary to maintain law and order.

The decision is the second setback in months for Parisian authorities' drone plans. In May, the same court ruled that drones could not be used in the capital to track people in breach of France's strict lockdown rules.

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THE OPERATION IS BEING PERFORMED