Last month in South Korea a surveillance drone lost GPS, possibly due to jamming by North Korea, and as a result crashed into its control truck, killing one engineer and injuring two pilots:
Although North Korea was intermittently jamming GPS in the
border region between 28 April and 15 May it is not known
if the jammer was operating at the time of the fatal crash.
The South has reacted angrily to the jamming, which has
interrupted navigation on more than 600 civilian flights -
and it has been likened to a form of terrorism by regional
media.
"All information recovered to date indicates that after a
loss of GPS signals to the aircraft's receivers incorrect
handling and omissions over a time period of a number of
minutes, resulted in an unfortunate chain of events that
ultimately led to the crash," the statement says.
On a historical note, if this turns out not to have been caused by GPS jamming and was purely an accident, I think this will be the first case of an accidental death caused by a drone (not counting people erroneously but intentionally targeted by drone weapons).
On a historical note, if this turns out not to have been caused by GPS jamming and was purely an accident, I think this will be the first case of an accidental death caused by a drone (not counting people erroneously but intentionally targeted by drone weapons).