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Hand-carried missiles pose growing threat to airlines, say researchers

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A member of the so-called Free Syrian Army, an anti-government group, demonstrates a Chinese FN-6 missile launcher that was used to shoot down a helicopter in 2013. Photo: YouTube

The spread of portable anti-aircraft missiles in the Middle East and North Africa could pose a threat to aviation security if the weapons fall into the hands of Islamic extremists, a report said.

The easy-to-use, lightweight weapons, or man-portable air defense systems (MANPADS), are proliferating due to looted stockpiles in Libya, arms trafficking and weapons sales to Iraq and other states, said the report released on Wednesday bt the Small Arms Survey, a research centre based in Geneva.

“The risks associated with international trafficking of advanced MANPADS are heightened by the rise of IS (Islamic State group) in the Middle East and North Africa,” the report said.

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“Shooting down a commercial airliner would be consistent with the group’s use of increasingly brutal acts to heighten its international profile,” it said.

“To the extent that IS and its affiliates can obtain access to advanced MANPADS, this represents a particularly acute threat to aviation security,” it said.

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WATCH: Syrian rebels shoot down a helicopter with a Chinese missile

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