BRUSSELS ? Eurocontrol urged the European Union to criminalize the malicious use of lasers to blind pilots and air traffic controllers ? a growing problem in both Europe and the United States that experts warn could lead to a crash.
The air traffic agency said Monday there were 4,266 such incidents in Europe last year, compared to just 1,048 in 2008. In the U.S., the number of incidents nearly doubled from 1,527 in 2009 to 2,836 last year.
"Preventing and mitigating the current problem requires a harmonized approach throughout Europe," Eurocontrol safety expert Dragica Stankovic said.
"We need the full involvement of regulators, judicial authorities, police, airlines and their associations, air navigation service providers, laser manufacturers who must understand how serious the problem is, as well as research institutes."
Interference with commercial airlines is already a federal crime in the U.S. and in some European nations such as Sweden and Austria.
But most EU states don't have such laws.
Typically, after police find and arrest the attackers, they will just question and then free them, Stankovic said on the sidelines of a conference dedicated to the problem and involving the EU Commission, the U.N. aviation agency ICAO, airlines' and pilots' associations, as well as national police authorities.
Incidents of laser interference generally involve people directing powerful laser beams at aircraft on take off or on the final landing approach, the most critical phases of flight when pilots need to be their most alert. In several recent cases, pilots flying the aircraft have been forced to hand the controls over to their co-pilots after being temporarily blinded.
While the so-called green lasers now in use can temporarily blind pilots, the more powerful blue lasers which are now commercially available could cause permanent vision impairment, Eurocontrol warned.
Helicopters, such as police and ambulance or rescue choppers, are especially vulnerable to laser attacks because they fly at lower altitudes than airliners. There have also been instances when lasers were directed at air traffic control towers.
Eurocontrol says that because of the potential danger posed by the handheld devices, which are readily available and cost just a few hundred euros, they should be subject to the same restrictions as firearms.
"The best solution is to have a harmonized approach across Europe based on an EU directive," Stankovic said. "EU legislation should cover the purchase, the carriage and the use of laser, exactly in the same way as for handguns, rifles and other weapons."
Politicians in other European nations also have been calling for tougher laws to punish individuals pointing lasers at aircraft cockpits. In Germany, Volker Kauder, head of the ruling Christian Democrats' faction in parliament, said last week that high-power lasers should be reclassified as weapons and included in the country's Arms Act.
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Follow Slobodan Lekic on Twitter at http://twitter.com/slekich
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