Pubdate: Thu, 26 Nov 1998 Source: Examiner, The (Ireland) Contact: http://www.examiner.ie/ Copyright: Examiner Publications Ltd, 1998 Author: Brian Carroll, Security Correspondent DRUG DEALERS TAKE TO SKY IN BID TO BEAT AUTHORITIES RADAR black-spots make Ireland's East Coast a prime location for international drug dealers using low-flying private aircraft to import drugs -- and our Air Corps can do nothing about it. Military experts warned yesterday that we are one of the only countries west of the Urals unable to control our own airspace. For the first time in the history of the State, Ireland has no interceptor aircraft to police our airspace. Military analysts called yesterday for six new Hawks or Alpha jets to police Irish airspace against the danger of international drug traffickers. The planes would cost between five and 10 million pounds to purchase second hand, but until they are bought there is a vast security loophole which can be easily exploited by drug dealers. "There are a lot of drugs coming into this country and the naval service is kept very busy at the surface level but in the air we need interceptors for surveillance, deterrence and forcing people to land," Air Corps Cmdt Paul Fry told yesterday's annual conference of the Representative Association of Commissioned Officers(RACO) in Galway. "People may be using private aircraft or helicopters to import drugs, we just don't know. We know that has happened already some years ago in Britain, where two private aircraft were intercepted coming in at a low-level," Cmdt Fry said. Ireland's radar coverage in low-lying areas, particularly along the east coast, south of the Wicklow mountains, is poor, with many black-spots. Outside a 30-mile radius around Shannon, Cork, or Dublin airports there is no radar coverage under 500 feet. These black-spots could be exploited by international drug dealers, the conference heard. Elsewhere drug dealers are using small aircraft, and flying in low without lights, to drop drugs at collection points on land. Experts say they could easily do the same here, by using the Global Positioning System which accurately pinpoints the location of the aircraft to within 30 yards anywhere on the planet. The pilot could fly in low, with the lights turned off and use night-vision equipment which is readily available and cheap. "The technology to do it is very cheap and very available and the huge rewards in drugs means the incentive is there to do it. We have to be prepared for that," a RACO spokesman said. The conference was also warned about the huge incidence of NATO aircraft passing through Irish airspace on route from mainland Europe to America. These plans had official sanction, but at present there was no way for the Irish Air Corps to investigate who the planes are or what their cargo is. Until the Air Corps gets powerful, well-armed interceptors, there is no way of ensuring our airspace isn't being violated. - --- Checked-by: derek rea