A filmmaker鈥檚 reverie in the spectacle of Yangon鈥檚 Shwedagon Pagoda was abruptly cut short on Sunday when his drone began disobeying his orders聽and fluttered into the hands of local security officials.
Lebanese-Armenian Instagrammer , whose travel videos have earned him 12,000 followers, visited the pagoda hoping to add it to his collection of wanderlusty memories from around the world.
鈥淚 make travel videos, showing the world each and every place I travel to,鈥 he told 黑料社. He said聽that in the year he’s been collecting drone footage during he’s travels, he never encountered a problem until he got to Yangon.
鈥淥n October 1, as soon as I arrived to Yangon, I decided to go see the amazing pagoda,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hile going in, I was taking some videos of the place, and I didn鈥檛 notice at all any signs saying 鈥榙rones not allowed.鈥 The security even scanned my bag at the door, which contained the drone, and they didn鈥檛 say or ask anything.鈥
After visiting the pagoda for an hour, 鈥渆xperiencing this amazing and peaceful place,鈥 Eric J. said he relocated to the park beside the pagoda before letting his drone loose so as not to disturb the people praying there.
鈥淚 flew it at around 150 meters so I wouldn鈥檛 disturb anyone in the temple with the noise,鈥 he said.
But as soon as the drone approached the pagoda, he lost his connection, and the drone started landing. He realized it was a controlled landing, so he went back inside the pagoda compound to check on it. Once inside, he saw that the pagoda’s security staff had forced the drone to land and were now holding it.
He said: 鈥淎fter taking billions of pictures of me and the drone, they told me to sign a paper that I approve the drone staying with them for one night, and I鈥檒l get it the next day.鈥
He said he聽apologized to the security officials and told them that if he had known drones were prohibited in the area, he never would have flown it there. He promised to pay a fine and never fly the drone in Yangon again.
鈥淭hey didn鈥檛 approve,鈥 he said.
Instead, 鈥淚 got a call saying I have to contact my country鈥檚 embassy, and my embassy should contact them to maybe get the drone back. But they advised me to forget about it as it鈥檚 going to be so complicated.鈥
鈥淣ow I don鈥檛 have my drone just because of a small mistake that I didn鈥檛 know about,鈥 he said. He鈥檚 not the only one.
Myanmar authorities banned the use of drones in the vicinity of the Shwedagon Pagoda in 2015, claiming they disturb religious observance. However, they have famously failed to publicize the restrictions.
Thaung Htike, a member of the pagoda鈥檚 board of trustees, told last year: 鈥淎lthough the restriction has been in place since September 2015, visitors do not seem to know about it yet, so we are sharing the message about this restriction through the media鈥e did an awareness campaign during the last year and put up notices around the pagoda. But it seems those measures were not effective.鈥
At the time聽he made that comment, pagoda officials were in possession of eight confiscated drones and had not formulated protocol on what to do with them.
One way the authorities could eliminate the confusion, Eric J. said, is by following the lead of other countries that deploy anti-UAV technology in places where drones are prohibited.

鈥淭he drone doesn鈥檛 take off despite how hard you try,鈥 he said. 鈥淢aybe they should do that around that [Shwedagon] area so people won鈥檛 make this mistake again.鈥
Eric J. left Myanmar yesterday without his drone, which he said cost him US$1,400.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 have the intention to harm or disrespect anyone,鈥 he told 黑料社. 鈥淚 just wanted to take one video of the place to include in my videos.鈥
