Turkey’s Police Turns To Local Market For UAVs

Turkey’s Police Turns To Local Market For UAVs

This post is also available in: heעברית (Hebrew)

The Turkish police ordered six drones and four ground control stations, with deliveries scheduled for 2016, procurement sources said.

The tactical unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) chosen by the police is a locally developed system, the Bayraktar, produced by two Turkish companies, Baykar and Kale Kalip.

The contract was launched in 2015 by Turkey’s defense procurement agency, the Undersecretariat for Defense Industries (SSM), to meet an “urgent requirement” requested by the police department.

Defense World reports that in its first fully automatic flight test in 2014, the Bayraktar flew for three hours at an altitude of 18,750 feet. In a later test, the drone reached an altitude of 27,000 feet and flew for 6.5 hours. And in a final round of tests, the drone flew at an altitude of 18,000 feet for 24.5 hours.

The Bayraktar features indigenous software and electronic systems, according to the producer. Its maximum take-off payload is 650 kilograms.

Kale-Baykar boasts that, under the Bayraktar program, the consortium developed various critical systems in drone technology, including a flight control with three back-up systems, inertial navigation and GPS systems, static pilot system, power control unit, a lithium-based smart battery, aerial data recording computer, video-link system, tail camera, ground control station and command-and-control software.

Procurement officials say that, due to increasing terror attacks on the police force, this department will emerge as a new buyer of drones.

“The police are emerging as a new market for drones,” one official said. “They need better intelligence capabilities and they believe they will augment their capabilities with drones.”

After Kurdish militants ended a 2013 cease-fire in July 2015, fighting has killed nearly 200 Turkish soldiers and police officers.

Subscribe to our newsletter.