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Two Drones Breach Finland Airspace, Crash Near Kouvola
(MENAFN) Two unmanned aerial vehicles breached Finnish airspace and came down near the southeastern town of Kouvola on Sunday morning, triggering an active investigation and heightening security concerns across the region, the country's Ministry of Defense confirmed. No casualties were reported.
The drones fell in two distinct locations — one north of Kouvola and another to the east — prompting police to seal off both crash sites as authorities worked to piece together the circumstances of the intrusion.
Finnish Air Force F/A-18 Hornets were already airborne in the vicinity at the time of the incident, though the Ministry of Defense was quick to clarify that the jets were on a reconnaissance mission. Prime Minister Petteri Orpo subsequently confirmed that no force had been deployed against the drones.
Defense Minister Antti Hakkanen struck a grave tone in addressing the breach. "The investigation is ongoing, and more information will be provided once it has been confirmed," he said, stressing that authorities were treating the episode with the utmost seriousness.
Public broadcaster Yle reported that the sequence of events began at 10:04 a.m., when a local resident contacted police after spotting an object descending into a nearby forest. In a separate statement, police said they were "working to determine the origin of the flying objects."
Speaking in a radio interview, Orpo offered an early assessment, suggesting the drones were in all likelihood Ukrainian. He pointed to Russia's well-documented use of electronic jamming against drone systems as a probable factor in the aircraft veering off their intended course and crossing into Finnish territory — adding that the incident underscored the urgency of bolstering Finland's defensive readiness against drone-related threats.
The development comes amid a surge in Ukrainian drone activity targeting Russian infrastructure along the Gulf of Finland. Russian media reported Sunday that a major fire erupted at Russia's Ust-Luga port, following a sustained wave of drone strikes over the preceding week.
The drones fell in two distinct locations — one north of Kouvola and another to the east — prompting police to seal off both crash sites as authorities worked to piece together the circumstances of the intrusion.
Finnish Air Force F/A-18 Hornets were already airborne in the vicinity at the time of the incident, though the Ministry of Defense was quick to clarify that the jets were on a reconnaissance mission. Prime Minister Petteri Orpo subsequently confirmed that no force had been deployed against the drones.
Defense Minister Antti Hakkanen struck a grave tone in addressing the breach. "The investigation is ongoing, and more information will be provided once it has been confirmed," he said, stressing that authorities were treating the episode with the utmost seriousness.
Public broadcaster Yle reported that the sequence of events began at 10:04 a.m., when a local resident contacted police after spotting an object descending into a nearby forest. In a separate statement, police said they were "working to determine the origin of the flying objects."
Speaking in a radio interview, Orpo offered an early assessment, suggesting the drones were in all likelihood Ukrainian. He pointed to Russia's well-documented use of electronic jamming against drone systems as a probable factor in the aircraft veering off their intended course and crossing into Finnish territory — adding that the incident underscored the urgency of bolstering Finland's defensive readiness against drone-related threats.
The development comes amid a surge in Ukrainian drone activity targeting Russian infrastructure along the Gulf of Finland. Russian media reported Sunday that a major fire erupted at Russia's Ust-Luga port, following a sustained wave of drone strikes over the preceding week.
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