Munich airport resumes flights after suspected drones force closure

ReutersFlights continued at Munich Airport, Germany, after forcing the unfamiliar drone landscapes to suspend the operations for the second time in 24 hours.
On Friday evening, the airport flights were stopped at 21:30 (20:30 GMT) and about 6,500 passengers were affected.
Due to multiple drone views in the nearby airspace, at least 17 flights were grounded in Munich on Thursday evening.
In recent weeks, it was the last of a series of events containing drones in Europe.
On Saturday morning, Munich Airport warned that flights were “slowly rising”, but delays are expected during the day.
In a statement on the website, passengers called on to continue to control the status of their flights before going to the airport.
According to the Belgian media, on Thursday, Belgian officials were investigating the landscapes of 15 drones on the Elsenborn military area near the German border.
After the opinion, the drones were reportedly flew from Belgium to Germany, where the police were observed by the police in the Küçük Düren town in West Germany.
Authorities could not determine where the drones caused or who operates.
German internal minister Alexander Dobrindt said that at a meeting of the European Interior Ministers on Saturday at a meeting, which was initially invoiced as a migration summit, it would bring the issue of anti -drone defense.
In the early hours of Friday, the minister promised to bring the proposed legislation to facilitate the police to hit the drones from the army.
The last drone landscapes in the European Union caused the top of the leaders in Copenhagen at the beginning of this week.
Several EU member states supported a multi -layered “Drone Wall” plans to quickly identify, monitor and destroy Russian drones.
Twenty Russian plane moved to Poland and the Russian Mig-31 jets recently entered the Estonian airspace in separate events.
Copenhagen and Oslo Airports were forced to close after detecting unidentified drones near the airport and military airports.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said that the airspace attacks worsen before the summit and “assuming drones come from Russia,” he said.
Russia rejected any participation, Danish officials say there is no evidence that Moscow is involved.
Speaking to a summit in the Black Sea Resort City on Thursday, Russian President Vladimir Putin laughed his proposals ordered the drone to Denmark.
Putin said, “I will not do it again. I will not do it again – not France, Denmark or Copenhagen,” Putin said.




