Peru Is Shooting Down Suspected Drug Planes
Peru Is Shooting Down Suspected Drug Planes
Aerial interdiction has cost innocent lives
by RODRIGO UGARTE
On April 20, 2001, Peruvian security forces, with CIA help, shot down a small floatplane over the Amazon near the Brazilian border. American missionary Veronica Bowers and her infant daughter died in the attack.
Having filed no flight plan, the aircrafts pilot failed to respond over the radio. Authorities suspected the plane of transporting drugs, but found no contraband aboard.
The tragic incident led to a major de-escalation of aerial-interdiction efforts in the region. But in 2015, Peru revived its aggressive shoot-down policy.
Limas new law expands the definition of a hostile aircraft to include any aircraft authorities even suspect of drug-trafficking. When an intercepted civilian aircraft has been declared hostile, it ceases to be a civilian aircraft, the law states.
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