Comment: It's them again, isn't it?
Major airports in Norway and Denmark were forced to ground all flights after multiple drone sightings near runways on Monday and early on Tuesday.
In Denmark, police said two or three large drones were spotted around Copenhagen Airport, the busiest in the Nordic region. Airspace was closed at 8:30pm local time, halting all take-offs and landings. About 30 departures and 20,000 passengers were affected.
In Norway, Oslo Airport closed its airspace from midnight after a drone was spotted, a spokesperson for airport operator Avinor told Reuters. All departing flights were canceled or delayed, while arrivals were redirected to Gothenburg and Malmo in Sweden until the airport reopened at around 3:22am on Tuesday.
"The police have launched an intensive investigation to determine what kind of drones these are," Copenhagen police deputy assistant commissioner Jakob Hansen said. "The drones have disappeared and we have not taken any of them." A police spokesperson told CNN that as of 10:15pm, no arrests had been made.
The drones were last seen at 11:17pm, with airspace reopening at 12:20am on Tuesday. Airport officials warned that delays and cancelations would continue.
Hansen said police in Denmark and Norway are cooperating to see if the incidents are connected.
Media reports said Oslo Police earlier arrested two Singaporean nationals accused of flying drones over the Akershus Fortress, a medieval castle used for government events, but it was unclear whether the case could be connected to the airport disruption.
The incidents come just days after major European airports faced electronic check-in and boarding outages that caused widespread delays and cancelations from Friday through Sunday. London's Heathrow was hit, as well as airports in Berlin and Brussels, with 73 flights canceled. Several media outlets linked the issue to a cyberattack on service provider Collins Aerospace.




Comment: The
RussophobicDanish authorities have of course "not excluded a link to Russia," and Western MSM is all for blaming Russia. But this isn't Russia because Russia doesn't do gimmicks.The video of one of the crafts looks similar to the hundreds of 'green-lighted large flying objects' seen over the US Northeast late last year.
The quasi-official stance on those was that they were "ours, but shhh, don't tell anybody!" Some of them were probably US mil-intel craft, but we suspect that the majority of them were actual UFOs/UAPs, and that the man-made versions were floated up to muddy the waters and 'calm the masses' into believing that 'the US govt is in control of its airspace.
These latest drone-airport incursions remind us of the Gatwick and Heathrow airport incidents in London in 2018.
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