Possible First Use of AI-Armed Drones Triggers Alarm Bells

Western military experts are assessing whether an autonomous drone operated by artificial intelligence, or AI, killed people — in Libya last year — for the first time without a human controller directing it remotely to do so.

A report by a United Nations panel of experts issued last week that concluded an advanced drone deployed in Libya “hunted down and remotely engaged” soldiers fighting for Libyan general Khalifa Haftar has prompted a frenetic debate among Western security officials and analysts.

Governments at the United Nations have been debating for months whether a global pact should be agreed on the use of armed drones, autonomous and otherwise, and what restrictions should be placed on them. The U.N.’s Libya report is adding urgency to the debate. Drone advances have “a lot of implications regionally and globally,” says Ziya Meral of the Britain’s Royal United Services Institute, a defense think tank.

“It is time to assess where things are with Turkish drones and advanced warfare technology and what this means for the region and what it means for NATO,” he said at a RUSI-hosted event in London.

According to the U.N. report, Turkish-made Kargu-2 lethal autonomous aircraft launched so-called swarm attacks, likely on behalf of Libya’s Government of National Accord, against the warlord Haftar’s militias in March last year, marking the first time AI-equipped drones accomplished a successful attack. Remnants of a Kargu-2 were recovered later.

The use of autonomous drones that do not require human operators to guide them remotely once they have been programmed is opposed by many human rights organizations. There were rumors that Turkish-supplied AI drones, alongside remote-guided ones, were used last year by Azerbaijani forces in their clashes with Armenia in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh and its surrounding territories.

Myriad of dilemmas

If AI drones did launch lethal swarm attacks it would mark a “new chapter in autonomous weapons,” worries the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. Critics of AI drones, which can use facial-recognition technology, say they raise a number of moral, ethical and legal dilemmas.

“These types of weapons operate on software-based algorithms ‘taught’ through large training datasets to, for example, classify various objects. Computer vision programs can be trained to identify school buses, tractors, and tanks. But the datasets they train on may not be sufficiently complex or robust, and an artificial intelligence (AI) may ‘learn’ the wrong lesson,” the non-profit Bulletin warns.

The manufacturer of the Kargu-2, Defense Technologies and Trade (STM), told Turkish media last year that their drones are equipped with facial-recognition technology, allowing individual targets to be identified and neutralized without having to deploy ground forces. And company executives say Kargu-2 drones can swarm together overwhelming defenses.

Last month, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan lauded the success of Turkish unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV), saying the results they had produced “require war strategies to be rewritten.” Turkey has deployed them in military operations in northern Syria, Turkish officials have acknowledged.

Speaking at a parliamentary meeting of his ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) in Ankara, Erdogan said Turkey plans to go further and is aiming to be among the first countries to develop an AI-managed warplane. Recently the chief technology officer of Baykar, a major Turkish drone manufacturer, announced the company had slated 2023 for the maiden flight of its prototype unmanned fighter jet.

‘A significant player’

Sanctions and embargoes on Turkey in recent years have been a major driving force behind Ankara pressing ahead to develop a new generation of unconventional weapons, says Ulrike Franke of the European Council for Foreign Relations. “Turkey has become a significant player in the global drone market,” she said at the RUSI event. When it comes to armed drones, she noted, there are four states dominating drone development — the U.S., Israel, China and Turkey. The latter pair, the “new kids on the block,” are driving drone proliferation because unlike the U.S. they are not reticent about export sales, she said.

“Turkey has shown that a mid-sized power, when it puts its mind and money behind it, can develop very sophisticated armed drones,” says Franke.

Last October when the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh saw the worst fighting there since 1994, Turkish drones were assessed as having given Azerbaijan a key edge over the Armenians. Turkish drones sliced through Armenia’s air defenses and pummeled its Russian-made tanks.

Analysts calculate around 90 countries have military drones for reconnaissance and intelligence missions and at least a dozen states have armed drones. Britain is believed to have ten; Turkey around 140. The U.S. air force has around 300 Reaper drones alone. The deployment of armed drones to conduct targeted killings outside formal war zones has been highly contentious. But AI drone development is adding to global alarm.

“With more and more countries acquiring armed drones, there is a risk that the controversies surrounding how drones are used and the challenges these pose to international legal frameworks, as well as to democratic values such as transparency, accountability and the rule of law, could also increase,” Britain’s Chatham House noted in a research paper published in April.

“This is accentuated further, given that the use of drones continues to expand and to evolve in new ways, and in the absence of a distinct legal framework to regulate such use,” say the paper’s authors Jessica Dorsey and Nilza Amaral.

Source: Voice Of America

Greece Deploys Drones to Stop Partygoers From Breaching COVID Rules

ATHENS – Authorities on Greece’s most popular tourist island, Mykonos, will deploy more than a dozen drones to spot those who defy safety protocols aimed at preventing the spread and resurgence of COVID-19.

The decision, known as “Operation Mykonos,” comes after a string of local so-called “Corona-parties” organized by entrepreneurs at private villas and estates in recent weeks to bypass safety rules banning the operation of nightclubs.

It also comes as the beleaguered government of Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis scrambles to revive its battered tourism sector, luring foreign travelers — mainly from the United States, Europe, Israel, and Russia — with the promise of a safe summer holiday stay under the Greek sun.

Foreign travelers are required to abide by local lockdowns, curfews, and safety protocols during their stays. Under “Operation Mykonos,” authorities will deploy 15 drones to fly over private villas or establishments in Mykonos that in recent weeks were host to parties packed with hundreds of locals and foreigners. Ten-member strong teams of officers will also be formed to raid the establishments upon notice, arresting and fining the offenders, authorities told VOA.

Fines range between $365 to over $6,000.

Officials tell VOA the measures, coupled with heightened police controls, inspections and added surveillance cameras across Mykonos, will serve as a blueprint for other popular hotspots among foreign travelers. These include Rhodes, Santorini and Paros, according to authorities.

“Illegal parties spell a greater risk of seeing the virus spread, infecting more and more people,” warned Nikos Hardalias, the head of Greece’s Civil Protection Agency, on Sunday. “It spells a spike in COVID cases that can lead to fresh restrictions, leading businesses to shut down, causing major damage to tourist areas.”

“It is high time,” he warned, “for everyone to size up to the challenge and take on full responsibility of their actions.”

On Monday, government spokesman Aristotelia Peloni also criticized the mushrooming “corona-parties” gripping the country, saying she wished “Greece’s youth showed similar zeal and enthusiasm in the state’s nationwide vaccination drive.”

“The country’s freedom,” she said, “can only come through comprehensive immunization.”

Effectively in lockdown since last November, Greece started easing some of its sweeping restrictions, including curfews and travel bans, in mid-May when it re-launched international travel.

The latest crackdown, however, underscores the paradox of what critics call a hasty and ill-thought-out strategy.

“You can’t say ‘restaurants and bars can open but no music playing in the background to block crowds from gathering,’” said Heracles Zissimopoulos, a leading entrepreneur on the island of Mykonos. “It’s absurd.”

“The government should seriously rethink its policy, and provide locals and tourists with an outlet, instead. Otherwise, these types of parties will be difficult to stop,” he added.

Greece recorded less than 3,000 cases during the country’s first bout with the pandemic. But as tourists streamed in last summer, infections and deaths sky-rocketed, making Greeks apprehensive to foreign travelers.

But with 20 percent of the nation’s domestic output reliant on tourism, Greeks now know they can ill afford to lose a second summer tourism season in a row.

Under a campaign called “Blue Freedom,” the government wants to vaccinate all 700,000 or so adult residents of Greece’s islands in the Aegean and Ionian Seas by the end of June, hoping Greece can be included in Britain’s revised green-list of travel nations. All islanders are being offered the single-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine to boost immunization.

As of early June, Mykonos had vaccinated about four in ten of its residents, and Santorini over 50% — among the highest in the country.

Source: Voice Of America

TECHNICIANS STRENGTHEN KNOWLEDGE ON ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT

Uíge – At least sixteen municipal heads of the Environment sector in Uíge province Monday started a training session on the legal framework of environmental management strategies aimed at improving management techniques and environment conservation.

As part of the celebration of World Environment Day (June 5), the director of the Provincial Environment Office for Waste Management and Community Services in Uige, José Teca, explained that the training aimed to minimise the excessive felling of trees and animals and avoid unregulated burning.

Lasting two days, the trainees are being trained in matters related to the conformity of acquired licences, environmental accidents, international environmental standards and economic aspects that have direct implications for the environment.

The heads of the environment section of the 16 municipalities of the province are also getting knowledge about waste management concepts, the problematic of environmental management, health and sustainable development.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

BOKO HARAM LEADER ‘KILLS SELF’ IN FIGHT WITH RIVAL JIHADISTS

Boko Haram’s leader Abubakar Shekau killed himself in a fight against rival jihadist fighters from the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) according to audio AFP obtained from the group Sunday, two weeks after reports emerged that he had died.

His death marks a major shift in Nigeria’s 12-year-old jihadist insurgency that has killed more than 40,000 people and displaced around two million in the northeast.

Boko Haram has not yet officially commented on the death of their leader while the Nigerian army said it was investigating the claim.

“Shekau preferred to be humiliated in the hereafter to getting humiliated on Earth. He killed himself instantly by detonating an explosive,” said a voice resembling that of ISWAP leader Abu Musab Al-Barnawi, speaking in the Kanuri language.

The audio, which was not dated, was given to AFP by the same source who conveyed previous messages from the group.

ISWAP described in the audio how it sent fighters to Boko Haram’s enclave in the Sambisa forest, that they found Shekau sitting inside his house and engaged him in a firefight.

“From there he retreated and escaped, ran and roamed the bushes for five days. However, the fighters kept searching and hunting for him before they were able to locate him,” the voice said.

After finding him in the bush, ISWAP fighters urged him and his followers to repent, the voice added, but Shekau refused and killed himself.

“We are so happy,” the voice said, describing Shekau as “the big troublemaker, persecutor and destructive leader of the nation.”

ISWAP split from Boko Haram in 2016, objecting to Shekau’s indiscriminate targeting of Muslim civilians and use of women suicide bombers.

ATROCITIES

“This was someone who committed unimaginable terrorism and atrocities. For how long has he been leading people astray? How many times has he destroyed and abused people?” the voice said.

In the past two years, ISWAP emerged as the more dominant force in the region, carrying out large-scale attacks against the Nigerian military.

As the group now looks to absorb Shekau’s fighters and territory, Nigeria’s army potentially faces a more unified jihadist force, analysts say.

But ISWAP may also struggle to control or persuade Boko Haram factions loyal to Shekau outside Sambisa, especially in border areas.

“It may not be over yet,” one security source said. “ISWAP will have to subdue or convince these camps to coalesce (them) into its fold to fully consolidate its control.”

Jihadist infighting may present opportunities for Nigeria’s army to seize.

But should ISWAP absorb part of Shekau’s men and weapons, it might be in a position to cut off roads to and from the Borno state capital Maiduguri, said Peccavi Consulting, a risk group specialising in Africa.

“If ISWAP convinces Shekau’s forces to join them, they will be controlling the majority of the enemy forces as well as having a presence in most of the ungoverned spaces in the northeast,” it said in a note.

Since 2019, Nigeria’s army has pulled out of villages and smaller bases to hunker down in so-called “supercamps”, a strategy critics say allows jihadists to roam free in rural areas.

Following its takeover of Sambisa, ISWAP sent messages to locals in the Lake Chad region, telling them they were welcome to its self-declared “caliphate”, said Sallau Arzika, a fisherman from Baga.

Locals were chased out of the lake islands after ISWAP accused them of spying for the military. Al-Barnawi said they could now return for fishing and trading after paying tax, with the assurance they would not be harmed, Arzika said.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

PRS DEFENDS MORE MEDIA TRANSPARENCY, IMPARTIALITY

Huambo – The secretary of the opposition PRS party in Huambo province, António Soliya Selende, Monday called for more freedom, transparency and impartiality of the press, focusing on respect for the principles of professional deontology and ethics.

According to the political party leader, in statements to the press, it is fundamental that the media organs are more aligned with the challenges of consolidating democracy, by guaranteeing freedom of expression of citizens.

He recalled that the guarantee of freedom of expression and of the press constitute fundamental rights of citizens, according to the Constitution of the Republic of Angola, hence the need for more accuracy and transparency.

The PRS, founded in 1990, represents the fourth political force in the province, after the MPLA (ruling party), UNITA and the CASA-SE electoral coalition.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

BAI PROVIDES KZ FOUR BILLION TO FINANCE ENTREPRENEURS IN UIGE

Uíge – Angolan Investment Bank (BAI) has made available for Uíge province, four billion kwanza to grant credit packages to local entrepreneurs, the local manager, Maria Bengui said Monday.

This year BAI has granted four loans valued at 650 million kwanzas, out of a total of 12 requests, after last year 39 requests were not dealt with, due to a lack of land titles and organised accounting by the companies that applied for them.

Maria Bengui, who was speaking at a workshop on Employment, Entrepreneurship, Social Responsibility and Local Development, explained that the “PAC Express” product provides 50 million per businessperson, whilst the “Startup Credit”, without guarantee, has a lower amount.

She noted that BAI had just four bank branches, amongst the 16 municipalities in Uige province.

At the meeting, promoted by MPLA’s Office for Citizenship and Civil Society, the workshop participants asked commercial banks to continue providing bank credit, a measure that aims to empower young people with entrepreneurial initiatives.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

ANPG EXTENDS ONSHORE BIDDING DEADLINE TO 30 DAYS

Luanda – The National Oil, Gas and Biofuel Agency (ANPG) has extended from 9 June to 9 July, the deadline for bidders to submit their proposals for the tender for the onshore bids in the basins of Lower Congo and Kwanzas.

In a statement published Monday, to which Angop had access, the national concessionaire, which did not give figures, also decided to review the value of the “entrance fee” for the tenders, which initially totalled US$1 million.

It also said that Covid-19 continues to affect the world economy, and has also destabilised the hydrocarbons market.

According to the document, the ANPG, which since its creation has been the driving force behind oil activity in Angola, opted to listen to the suggestions of the national business community and foreign investors about a review of the entrance fee in order to facilitate the entry of new players in the sector.

Without detailing the revision made to the entrance fee, ANPG justifies the decision with the fact that many of the companies interested in the process requested a longer period for better knowledge of the dossier, of the data it contains and also for clarification of doubts with the technicians of that concessionaire.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

SA RECORDS 5,074 NEW COVID-19 INFECTIONS, 45 FATALITIES

JOHANNESBURG – South Africa is starting off the week with a daily corona-virus infection rate of 5,074 for the past 24-hour reporting cycle.

These take the country’s known caseload since the start of the pandemic to 1,696,000.

Sadly, 45 more people have also died after contracting the virus, with the death toll now at 56,974.

The Health Department said that 1,578,000 people had recovered so far, which worked out to a recovery rate of 93%.

Over 1.3 million healthcare workers and people over 60 have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

COVID-19: ANGOLA RECORDS 449 RECOVERIES, 82 NEW CASES

Luanda – The health authorities announced Monday the recovery of 449 patients, the registration of 82 new cases and 3 deaths.

According to health minister, Silvia Lutucuta, who was speaking at a press conference, amongst those recovered, 315 live in Luanda, 61 in Cuando Cubango, 27 in Huambo, 18 in Namibe, 11 in Huila, 5 in Zaire, 3 in Benguela, 3 in Cuanza Sul, 2 in Bengo, 2 in Cunene, 1 in Bié and 1 in Lunda Norte.

Among the new cases, she said, 49 were diagnosed in Luanda, 11 in Huila, 7 in Cuando Cubango, 4 in Huambo, 3 in Bié, 2 in Cabinda, 2 in Cuanza Norte, 2 in Malanje and 2 in Zaire.

The new patients, whose ages range from 3 to 83 years old, include 56 mem 26 women.

According to the Cabinet minister, the deaths were registered in Luanda, with 1, and Huíla with 2.

The general figure shows 35,854 positive cases, with 800 deaths, 29,329 recovered and 5,725 active.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

COVID-19: GOVERNMENT MAINTAINS PREVENTION MEASURES

Luanda – The Angolan government announced Monday the maintenance of measures to prevent and fight Covid-19, as part of the update of the Decree on the State of Public Calamity.

Among the new measures included in the Presidential Decree on the Situation of Public Calamity, which is in force until 8 July, is the maintenance of the 50 percent of workforce in public and private sectors in Luanda, with the exception of educational institutions, health, defence and public order forces, media, energy and water, ports and airports, bank branches and solid waste collection services, which should maintain them at 100 percent.

In the other provinces, according to the minister of State and head of the President’s Civil House, Adão de Almeida, the workforce will also remain at 75 percent in public and private services.

In Luanda, the restrictions include the closure of restaurants and similar establishments, in Luanda, on weekends and a ban on leaving and entering without authorisation, with the exception of citizens on duty, duly accredited, businesspeople with goods and services, transport of the sick or transfer of corpses.

Also in Luanda, cinemas remain closed, as do restaurants and similar establishments at weekends.

In order to prevent the importation of new variants of the disease, the government also ordered a ban on the entry of non-resident foreign citizens, coming from or travelling through Brazil and India.

According to the Minister of State and Chief of Civil House of the President of the Republic, Adão de Almeida, the new measures aim at stopping positive cases in the country.

Source: Angola Press News Agency