statism watch

  • Topicgate

  • Recent Posts

  • Search

  • Recent Forum Posts

  • Top Commenters

  • Recent Comments

  •  

  • Archives

Kandahar spy blimp raises privacy concerns

Share

Coming to a city, town, or major sporting event near you.

Flashback: 250-Foot Long Hybrid Airship Will Spy Over Afghanistan Battlefields in 2011 | Sarnia resident plans ‘moon’ protest of US border spy balloon | Military spycraft patrols Ontario border from Fort Drum | Military spy blimp watched Indy race from on high | Pentagon plans blimp to spy from new heights | Remote-controlled planes could spy on British homes | Predator drones patrolling border irk Manitoba MLA | Hoverdrone to be deployed to Iraq

CBC News
October 23, 2009

An unmanned spy blimp floating high above the city of Kandahar is being praised by military officials as a useful security tool, but criticized by Afghan locals who say it violates their privacy.

Known as the “persistent threat detection system” by the U.S. air force, the device is a small blimp outfitted with cameras and microphones that can stream video and audio in real time from trouble spots in and around Kandahar.

Anchored by a tether and capable of being deployed to an altitude of more than 1,600 metres, it is believed to be out of the range of small-arms fire. It’s been in use since June and no one has managed to take it down yet, but local residents are threatening to shoot down the blimp over concerns it violates their privacy.

“We are happy for the increased security. But many people here still don’t like it,” a local resident said when approached by a journalist in Kandahar.

“It has a camera that can see 360 degrees,” U.S. air force Col. Marilyn Jenkins says in an army video about the device. “With that camera we can go anywhere in the city and look for any threat or any intentions from the insurgency.”

More troubling than the general privacy issues are residents’ concerns that the device could be used to spy on women.

Women’s rights are a highly contentious issue in Afghanistan, a Muslim country. Earlier this year, a prominent women’s rights activist was gunned down in Kandahar, and Afghan President Hamid Karzai drew international condemnation recently for a law that critics alleged legalized rape within Afghan marriages.

“The balloon is for security. This is good,” a Pashtun man said. “But we are a tribal people, Pashtun people, and if they can see our women, this is not good.”

Pleased with the results thus far, the U.S. military is forging ahead. Plans are underway for similar surveillance devices in Kabul and throughout the country.

The blimp is the latest instance of the U.S. military using balloons in military applications. As far back as the U.S. Civil War, union soldiers used hot air balloons as surveillance platforms.

Source | See Also under Surveillance: UK: Secret files reveal covert network run by nuclear police | U.S. Spies Buy Stake in Firm That Monitors Blogs, Tweets | UK anti-terrorism strategy ’spies’ on innocent | Security may soon test ‘virtual strip search’ at large Canadian aiports | Interpol and U.N. Back ‘Global Policing Doctrine’ | Google Street View goes live in Canadian cities | UN Urges International Action on Cyber Security Threat | Spy agencies now free to eavesdrop on Canadians abroad | Olympic security follows protester’s friend | Random breathalyzer tests considered for Canada | Embryonic EU security office set up in secret talks under Lisbon Treaty | Laptops fair game for border searches | US Border Guards to Expand Use of X-Ray Body Scanners | Case for Internet spying not closed | UK: Garbage spies alarm neighbourhood | 250-Foot Long Hybrid Airship Will Spy Over Afghanistan Battlefields in 2011 | Obama Stands Behind Use of ‘State Secrets’ in Warrantless Surveillance Lawsuit | Precrime: Artificially Intelligent CCTV could prevent crimes before they happen | Report: Massive FBI database set to quadruple in size | More troops on the streets: U.S. terror alert expands to transit and stadiums | EU Plans Massive Surveillance Panopticon That Would Monitor “Abnormal Behavior” | US Police to get access to classified military intelligence | Obama Backs Extending Patriot Act Spy Provisions | Planned Internet, wireless surveillance laws worry watchdogs | Bill would give president emergency control of Internet | Bush’s Search Policy For Travelers Is Kept | ACLU Sues US Department of Homeland Security over Border Laptop Searches | UK Government to consider internet disconnection policy, restrictions | In UK, 1,000 cameras ’solve one crime’ | Privacy commissioner OKs Barwatch software | Quebec’s photo radar starts ticketing | Britain To Put CCTV Cameras Inside Private Homes | UK ISPs condemn Internet surveillance plans | Sarnia resident plans ‘moon’ protest of US border spy balloon | Pentagon Caught Subverting Protest Group | UK: Big Brother state wants even more spy powers | UK: Woman detained for filming police search launches high court challenge | US: Town on SF Bay wants to photograph every car | Don’t regulate traffic management, Internet providers argue | Toronto TAVIS special police corps demanding ID on city streets | BC Bars swipe patron IDs, collect data | 50 Toronto high schools to have armed police presence | Use of warrantless police wiretaps flies under the radar | Mysterious people tailing Abdelrazik in first days home | UK to found new ‘cyber-security’ units attached to national eavesdropping centre | Illegal Victoria Transit bag searches reinstated under new policy for Canada Day | Volunteer snitches man cameras in Lancaster, PA. | Toronto police ready to take over transit patrols | Military spycraft patrols Ontario border from Fort Drum | ISPs must help police snoop on internet under new bill | UK plans to integrate ‘cybersecurity’ centre with US, Canada | MPs call for expanded privacy law | Military spy blimp watched Indy race from on high | UK: Spy bugs may be deployed for 2012 Olympics | Police pounce on 20th Tiananmen anniversary | US Federal Judge Tosses Telecom Spy Suits | UK schoolkids trained to inform on ‘extremist’ classmates by police DVD | UK Schoolkids Protest CCTV, Hidden Microphones in Class | New border rules create ‘invisible Berlin Wall’: mayor | Homeland Security to scan fingerprints of travellers exiting the US | UK recruits an army of snoopers with police-style powers | Showdown in NSA Wiretap Case: Judge Threatens Sanctions Against Justice Department | Surveillance plane tagged wrong car, seized for street racing, woman says | New US border technology directed at insidious threat: Canadians | UK installing license plate scanning network | Toronto police board challenges chief on CCTV deterrence, demands ‘phase-in’ | UK: Retaining images from surveillance of protesters ruled illegal | Police laud Toronto surveillance cameras, critics not so sure | Google PowerMeter to track home energy usage in Toronto test drive | Next up for France: police keyloggers and Web censorship | Clinton defends new border restrictions | Criminologists: CCTV schemes in city and town centres have little effect on crime | Saudi files for ‘killer’ tracking chip patent | ‘Smart meters’ set to boost prices, track your power consumption by time of day in Toronto | France passes ‘three strikes’ Internet surveillance law | UK: New biometric security checks could include brain scans, heart rhythm fingerprinting | SMS texts being data mined in France: Man strip searched, held after joke | UK Home Secretary has secret plan to surveil, ‘Master the Internet’ | UK wants industry to track Internet users as plans scrapped for state database | Military’s ‘Polar Breeze’ cloaked in secrecy | Australian nightclub installs face-scanning security system | UK: Children to be tracked by sat nav to stop bad behaviour | NSA Surveillance Exploding, Americans Wiretapped Beyond Congressional Limits | Microchip in a pill to monitor your meds | French legislators reject internet piracy bill | Trash search doesn’t violate privacy rights, says top court | Following Bush lead, Obama moves to block challenge to wiretapping program | UK: Big Brother row as police start using camera cars to fine wayward drivers | Britons block Google Street View van | NYPD seeks to expand anti-terror program to midtown | Big Brother is watching: surveillance box to track drivers is backed | Munk Centre researchers discover botnet, call for international cyberspace ‘legal regime’ | Britain may snoop on social websites | London Police Encourage Citizens To Inform on Neighbour’s Garbage | Google Street View comes to Canada | Right to privacy broken by a quarter of UK’s public databases, says report | UK Home Secretary unveils civilian anti-terrorism security force | Pre-Olympic transit ads encourage citizen surveillance | Security certificate detainee requests prison over intrusions on family | Smart licences now available for border-hopping Quebecers | Homeland Security seeks Bladerunner-style lie detector | Pentagon plans blimp to spy from new heights | Internet ad tracking system will put a ’spy camera’ in the homes of millions, warns founder of the web | NSA Dominance of Cybersecurity Would Lead to ‘Grave Peril’, Ex-Cyber Chief Tells Congress | TASER launches new headcam for police – with ‘privacy mode’ | French government accused of ‘Big Brother’ tactics over internet piracy | UK police maintain databank on thousands of protesters | Military may patrol bar zone in Barrie | UK: Civil servants attacked for using anti-terror laws to spy on public | UK: Government ‘using fear as a weapon to erode civil liberties’ | Obama tries to kill lawsuit challenging wiretapping program, fails | UK security whitepaper urges ‘end of privacy’| Remote-controlled planes could spy on British homes | US Bill proposes ISPs, Wi-Fi keep logs for police | Predator drones patrolling border irk Manitoba MLA | Schools seek more police as crime drops | Former MI5 chief: UK Ministers ‘using fear of terror’ to restrict civil rights | U.S. set to launch Predator drones to monitor Manitoba border | UK: Calling the police to account for anti-photography law | UK: Landlord fights police plan for CCTV at pub | The Spy Factory: The New Thought Police| New law to give police access to online exchanges | Security cameras proposed for downtown Sydney | Obama’s Change: Expanding the Power of the NSC and Shadow Government | UK House of Lords warns over ’surveillance state’ | Electronic immunization records needed: Toronto health official | Police presence in high schools makes the grade | Chinese Learn Limits of Online Freedom as the Filter Tightens | UK Terror Law To Make Photographing Police Illegal | Montreal in bid to unmask protesters | Whistleblower: NSA even collected credit card records | UK-Irish travellers to face passport checks | Let’s face it, soon Big Brother will have no trouble recognising you | U.S. visitors now required to register online with Department of Homeland Security | GPS wristwatch helps parents track children | Regulator will force cellphone companies to adopt GPS tracking system | Military challenge: Make spy data more accessible | EU Police set to step up warrantless hacking of home PCs | UK: ‘Spy-in-sky’ trials get the go-ahead despite Government promise to scrap road-pricing plan | Private firm may administer UK surveillance database | Toronto surveillance project to enter new phase pending review | CSIS monitoring calls between suspects and their lawyers| Military Tech on the Home Front: Predator drones to begin surveillance of Canada-US border | Supreme Court set to consider privacy rights | Has your child been CAFed? How the Government plans to record intimate information on every child in Britain | SWAT Teams raiding Amish, Food Co-ops in Rural US | Cyberbullying verdict turns rule-breakers into criminals | Drug-sniffing dog plan for BC SkyTrain unconstitutional: legal critics | UK Big Brother police to get ‘war-time’ power to demand ID in the street | Greyhound introduces security screening of passengers, bans fruit, carry-ons | London musicians expected to disclose ethnicity, 8 pages of personal information to perform | Canada backpedals on sharing ID database with U.S. | Former US congresswoman, presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney barred from boarding plane to human rights conference | Retired B.C. woman surprised to find herself on international no-fly list | Indonesian AIDS patients face microchip monitoring | Queen’s proposed thought-crime cadres prove controversial | Tribunal shouldn’t police online hate, report says | U.S. air-security rules cause Canadian turbulence | Social services set up CCTV camera in couple’s bedroom | IMF: G20 meeting underscores need for greater surveillance, changes in global governance | Coming soon to your cellphone: Your credit card via RFID chip | Flaherty calls for mandatory IMF surveillance | Halifax thinks again about subjecting applicants to lie-detector tests | Australia to Implement Mandatory Internet Censorship | Parents, children to be fingerprinted at initial 250+ nursery schools in UK | Police will use new device to take fingerprints in street, vendors say face scanning next | Germany rejects full-body scans at airports | US military targets social nets | Homeland Security Assuming Broad Powers, Turning Swaths of U.S. into “Constitution-Free Zone”| Interpol wants facial recognition database to catch suspects | UK Shortly to Become Worse Surveillance Society than Stasi East Germany | Feds give customs agents free hand to seize travelers’ documents | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | American Rail Passengers Subject to Random Searches, Police Presence | Troops in the Streets: Army Brigades Standing By to Assist in Disasters, Help Quell Dissent | Two trustees stand opposed to armed police in schools | How Big Brother watches your every move | Surveillance on the Great Lakes: U.S. tightens security along border | Secret EU security draft risks uproar with call to pool policing and give US personal data | Vision 2015: Consolidation of U.S. Intelligence Into Global Intel Network | U.S. border agents given power to seize travellers’ laptops, cellphones | Saskatchewan adopting US-mandated ID card, to include RFID chip, facial recognition | Eye scans, fingerprints to control NZ borders | UK Surveillance Commissioner calls for intelligence officers to work with municipalities | Britain considers giant database of all phone calls, EMails, browsing history | Bush approves surveillance bill | Air Canada objects to US plans to fingerprint exiting foreigners | Air passengers to undergo ‘virtual strip search’ | Sweden approves wiretapping law | Could humiliation be the next weapon in our war on crime? | Ottawa Proposes Band-Aid ‘Bill of Rights’ for Airline Travellers | Opposition to proposed Swedish surveillance law mounts | Sweden sets sights on new ‘catch and release’ wiretap law | Mobile Phone Users Secretly Tracked for Behaviorist Study | Pistol Pendant Causes Airport Holdup | US Homeland Security Keen on ‘Novel’ Israeli Airport Security Technology | Tanks, Face-Scanning Cameras Part of ‘Discreet’ 2010 Games Security | Secretive Canadian spy agency to get $62-million HQ | Ontario Privacy Czar Worried about High-Tech Licences | Criticism for ‘UK database’ plan | Border ‘two-headed monster,’ industry minister says | American Border Officers Want to Fingerprint Canadians at SPP Bridge | PM voices concerns about ‘thickening’ of U.S. border | Airport scanner a ‘virtual strip search’ | U.S. to collect DNA at border | Whistle-Blower: Feds Have a Backdoor Into Wireless Carrier — Congress Reacts | Surveillance cameras to keep an eye on downtown Calgary | Canada on way to brave new world of surveillance | Canada working with FBI on ’server in the sky’ | FBI wants instant access to British, Canadian identity data | Privacy issues surround planned TTC cameras | Listening in on the enemy: Canada’s master eavesdroppers

Bookmark and Share

4 Responses to “Kandahar spy blimp raises privacy concerns”

  1. statism watch » Blog Archive » UK Police in £9m scheme to log ‘domestic extremists’ Says:

    [...] Kandahar spy blimp raises privacy concerns [...]

  2. statism watch » Blog Archive » UN: Drone attacks may violate international law Says:

    [...] Kandahar spy blimp raises privacy concerns | US drone ’shot down over Somalia’ | Military spycraft patrols Ontario border from Fort Drum | [...]

  3. statism watch » Blog Archive » US Air Force confirms new ‘Beast of Kandahar’ drone Says:

    [...] by Pakistanis over attacks by aerial drones | UN: Drone attacks may violate international law | Kandahar spy blimp raises privacy concerns | US drone ’shot down over Somalia’ | Canada’s military peers into future, sees drone [...]

  4. statism watch » Blog Archive » Future police: Meet the UK’s armed robot drones Says:

    [...] by Pakistanis over attacks by aerial drones | UN: Drone attacks may violate international law | Kandahar spy blimp raises privacy concerns | US drone ’shot down over Somalia’ | Canada’s military peers into future, sees drone [...]

Leave a Reply