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Ferguson no-fly zone 'aimed at media'

By Associated Press in Washington | China Daily | Updated: 2014-11-04 07:52

Safety cited as reason for air closure, but commercial flights were allowed

The US government agreed to a request from the police to restrict more than 95 square kilometers of airspace surrounding Ferguson, Missouri, for 12 days in August for safety, but audio recordings show that local authorities acknowledged privately that the purpose was to keep away news helicopters during street protests.

On Aug 12, the morning after the US Federal Aviation Administration imposed the first flight restriction, FAA air traffic managers struggled to redefine the flight ban to let commercial flights operate at nearby Lambert-St. Louis International Airport and police helicopters fly through the area - but ban others.

"They finally admitted it really was to keep the media out," said one FAA manager about the St. Louis County Police in a series of recorded telephone conversations obtained by The Associated Press. "But they were a little concerned of, obviously, anything else that could be going on."

At another point, a manager at the FAA's Kansas City center said police "did not care if you ran commercial traffic through this TFR (temporary flight restriction) all day long. They didn't want media in there."

FAA procedures for defining a no-fly area did not have an option that would accommodate that.

"There is really ... no option for a TFR that says, you know, everybody but the media is OK," he said. The managers then worked out wording they felt would keep news helicopters out of the area without impeding other air traffic.

Ferguson no-fly zone 'aimed at media'

The conversations contradict claims by the St. Louis County Police Department, which responded to demonstrations following the shooting death of 18-year-old Michael Brown, that the restriction was solely for safety.

Police said at the time, and as recently as late on Friday to the AP, that they requested the flight restriction in response to shots fired at a police helicopter.

But police officials confirmed there was no damage to their helicopter and were unable to provide an incident report on the supposed shooting.

The AP obtained the recordings under the US Freedom of Information Act. They raise serious questions about whether police were trying to suppress aerial images of the demonstrations, and their response to it, by violating the constitutional rights of journalists with tacit assistance by federal officials.

"Any evidence that a no-fly zone was put in place as a pretext to exclude the media from covering events in Ferguson is extraordinarily troubling and a blatant violation of the press's First Amendment rights," said Lee Rowland, an American Civil Liberties Union staff attorney specializing in First Amendment issues.

FAA Administrator Michael Huerta said in a statement on Sunday that his agency will always err on the side of safety. "FAA cannot and will never exclusively ban media from covering an event of national significance, and media was never banned from covering the ongoing events in Ferguson in this case."

Huerta also said that, to the best of the FAA's knowledge, "no media outlets objected to any of the restrictions" during the time they were in effect.

(China Daily 11/04/2014 page12)

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