Lithuania says it will shoot down Belarus smuggler balloons disrupting air traffic

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Lithuanian Prime Minister Inga Ruginiene says the country will begin to shoot down balloons from Belarus that have repeatedly disrupted its air traffic.

Lithuanian Prime Minister Inga Ruginiene says the country will begin to shoot down balloons from Belarus that have repeatedly disrupted its air traffic.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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  • Lithuania will shoot down smuggler balloons from Belarus, which have disrupted air traffic and are considered "hybrid attacks" by PM Ruginiene.
  • Border crossings with Belarus, excluding diplomatic and EU departures, will be closed; Lithuania may invoke NATO Article 4 due to security concerns.
  • Recent airspace violations, including Russian military aircraft incursions, are viewed by Lithuania as calculated provocations to destabilise NATO.

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VILNIUS - Lithuania’s Prime Minister Inga Ruginiene said on Oct 27 her country will begin to shoot down smuggler balloons crossing the border from Belarus, which have repeatedly interrupted the Baltic nation’s air traffic.

Lithuania

closed Vilnius Airport four times

last week after balloons entered its airspace, and each time temporarily shut its Belarus border crossings in response to the incidents.

Lithuania has said balloons are sent by smugglers transporting contraband cigarettes from Belarus into the EU, but it also blames Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko, a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, for not stopping the practice.

Ms Ruginiene called the incidents “hybrid attacks” and said the Belarus border crossings will be closed except for travel by diplomats and by European Union citizens leaving the neighbouring country.

“Today we have decided to take the strictest measures. There is no other way,” Ms Ruginiene told a press conference, adding that Nato member Lithuania may also discuss invoking Nato Article 4 security consultations.

Belarus summoned Lithuania’s charge d’affaires in Minsk to protest Vilnius’ unilateral closure of the border, which was carried out without official notice, the Foreign Ministry said, according to the Belta news agency.

European aviation has

repeatedly been thrown into chaos

in recent weeks by drone sightings and other air incursions, including at airports in Copenhagen, Munich and the Baltic region.

On Oct 23, Lithuania said two Russian military aircraft had

entered its airspace

for about 18 seconds, prompting a formal protest and a reaction from Nato forces, while Russia denied the incident.

Lithuanian Foreign Minister Kestutis Budrys said recent airspace violations should not be regarded as isolated incidents.

“These are calculated provocations designed to destabilise, distract (and) test Nato’s resolve,” he said on social media X. REUTERS

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