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TECHNOLOGY

French police roll out first secret speed radars

The first 20 of a new generation of mobile speed radars took to the roads in France on Friday concealed in unmarked police cars. The devices have been described by police as "undetectable" and are designed to tackle the worst offenders.

French police roll out first secret speed radars
Photo: Screengrab Le Parisien/ LP/Yann Foreix

From Friday, 20 unmarked French police cars will be roaming the highways of 18 departments throughout the country, armed with the newest weapon in the battle to cut the number of road deaths caused by speeding – the mobile speed camera.

The cameras will be fixed on the dashboard with a radar hidden behind the number plate to detect a car's speed.

The 18 departments in which the first cameras will be used in are Paris, Essonne, Somme, Oise, Loiret, Ille-et-Vilaine, Bouches- du-Rhône, Haute-Garonne, Rhône, Nord, Moselle, Loire-Atlantique, Gironde, Calvados, Pyrénées- Orientales, Vaucluse, Loir-et-Cher and Alpes-Maritimes.

Explaining the need for the new technology, France’s road safety authority said in a statement on Friday that “excessive speed is a major cause of road deaths, and was responsible for 26% of fatal accidents in 2012".

The government plans to increase number of the new generation radars to 300 between now and 2016.

Although the cameras will be in unmarked cars officers will have to wear their police uniforms, which might be the only signal that could give away their presence on the motorway. Drivers rushing down to the south of France this summer should also be careful who they overtake as for the first few months police will only penalize cars who pass their own vehicle at top speed.

A statement from the anti-speeding Victimes and Citizens group welcomed Friday’s introduction of the mobile radars on to French roads.

“This is the best possible response to devices and [smartphone] applications for detecting and cheating speed radars,” the group was quoted as saying in Le Parisien.

However, a leading motorists’ rights group has reacted with caution to the machines. Speaking after the unveiling of the mobile radar project in February, Pierre Chasseray, head of French drivers organisation ‘40 millions d'automobilistes’ told The Local he was concerned the new device would be used to "trap" ordinary road users.

"If these devices are used to trap the real speeding drivers, the criminals and the real dangerous drivers then that will be a good thing," Chasseray said. "If they are used to trap ordinary drivers who might be slightly over the limit, then that will be counter-productive in terms of road safety."

 The devices are designed to be able to take accurate photos from inside moving vehicles and will gradually replace the older generation of radars, first deployed in 2004.

Any speeds registered by the cameras will be reduced because of a 10 percent margin of error so anyone driving on a French autoroute (motorway), where the limit is 130kph, will have to be driving at 146kph to be snared by the new radars.

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CRIME

One dead, several injured in Paris suburb shooting

One person was killed and six injured overnight in a gritty northern Paris suburb in a shooting likely linked to drug trafficking, prosecutors and the mayor said Saturday.

One dead, several injured in Paris suburb shooting

The attack in a parking lot near a cultural centre at Sevran, which lies between central Paris and the city’s main airport Charles de Gaulle, took place around 11:45 pm (2145 GMT) Friday, prosecutors said.

Upon arriving on the scene, police found four injured people strewn on the ground. One died soon after and the three others were taken to hospitals in a serious condition, a police source said.

Three more people injured by bullets were later taken to hospital, the source said, adding that two men had arrived in the parking lot in a car and one of them got out and opened fire.

The attackers then fled.

Sevran mayor Stephane Blanchet told AFP “it was clearly a settling of scores linked to drug trafficking.”

“There is a need to establish order and eradicate trafficking,” he said. “Those idiots fired live bullets and did not heed appeals for calm”.

Police have opened an investigation into intentional homicide by an organised gang, they said. No arrests had been by Saturday morning.

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