Estonia demands Ukraine: Drones must not enter Estonian airspace again
Estonian Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna made a request to Andriy Budanov, head of President Zelenskyy's office, to prevent Ukrainian drones from continuing to enter Estonian airspace.
"I have clearly stated that all feasible measures must be taken to prevent Ukrainian drones from entering our airspace."
Tsahkna also emphasized that Estonia has not opened its airspace to any party for drone flights.
Finnish media Yle reported that three "foreign" drones have crashed in Finland within three days.
Early on March 29, two drones were discovered in southern Finland: one near the city of Kouvola in the Kymenlaakso region, and another in Lumijärvi village in South Karelia.
Finnish law enforcement confirmed that the drone found near Kouvola was a Ukrainian AN-196 model. The second drone has not been officially disclosed, but Kyiv has apologized for both incidents.
The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry stated these drones were originally intended to strike Russian oil ports in the Baltic Sea but deviated from their course due to electronic warfare interference.
On March 31, another drone was discovered on the ice of Lake Puhajarvi in South Karelia. Preliminary information suggests it "may also" have been Ukrainian. Ukraine attributed this incident to Russia.
Previously, Finland had begun distributing emergency guidelines for drone attacks. Earlier reports indicated that Baltic states had previously opened their airspace for strikes against Russia.
Original source: toutiao.com/article/1861279698077708/
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