Beijing Capital Airport is asking the local government 
for quick legislation against keeping pigeons around the airport after a 
collision of a flock of the birds with a plane on Monday, the Beijing News 
reported. 
 
 
 |  A British Airways plane collides with a flock of birds in 
 this undated file photo.
 
  | 
 
 
 
At about 8 pm on June 18, a flock of pigeons collided with a plane while 
landing, and fortunately didn't impact the plane and the safety of the 
passengers. Nine pigeons were found dead and they were identified as those kept 
by a villager living three kilometers away from a runway in the western part of 
the airfield. 
The airport says the top "enemies" of the airport need to be kept away from 
the area and related departments should have more restrictions in place as soon 
as possible not only for the safety of the planes but for the birds as well. 
But the local pigeon association responded that prohibiting the raising of 
pigeons in the area cannot ensure the safety of the planes 100 percent, for even 
pigeons far away from the area may lose their way and end up there. 
Since 1997, more than 10 municipal and provincial governments such as 
Guiyang, Chongqing, Sichun and Nanjing have introduced rules and regulations to 
control and administer the keeping and setting free of birds near airports, an 
airport manager says. According to the Beijing government, the Chinese capital 
doesn't have similar regulations. 
Xia Xueluan, a sociology professor with Peking University thinks Beijing 
needs local regulations to ensure the safety of flights at Beijing Capital 
Airport. Though it is a sport for the residents nearby to keep carrier pigeons, 
it is not a private activity when it affects the safety of the public. 
"They must have been wild pigeons that accidentally got in the plane's way," 
a local resident called Liu Wanfu told the Beijing News. He said the carrier 
pigeons kept by the locals are trained near their houses. Even when they do 
long-distance training every year, they fly regular routes. Another resident 
says the pigeons are scared of the loud noise from the planes and would never go 
near them. 
The destructive force of a collision between the birds and a plane can be as 
fatal as an explosion of an artillery shell. This is also one of the major 
causes of air crashes. People in charge of airport operations use many tactics 
to keep birds away from the runway. These include a net smeared with birdlime, 
audio systems, blinding light systems and gas artillery are used to threaten the 
birds and they cost the airport nearly a million yuan every year.