VILNIUS: Lithuania’s Vilnius airport resumed operations on Thursday evening, after closing for more than an hour due to smugglers’ balloons again appearing on radar, Lithuania’s National Crisis Management Center said.
Last month, the Baltic republic closed its border crossings with Belarus in response to airspace disruptions by weather balloons coming in from Belarus, but reopened them earlier on Thursday.
“As the Prime Minister has said, if hybrid attacks of this nature continue, all border checkpoints may be closed again,” a spokesperson for Lithuanian premier Inga Ruginiene said in a statement.
Lithuania has said the balloons, which have caused closures at Lithuanian airports, are flown by smugglers transporting contraband cigarettes and blames Belarus’s President Alexander Lukashenko for not stopping the practice, calling it a form of “hybrid attack.”
Lukashenko has called the border closure a “crazy scam,” accusing the West of fighting a hybrid war against Belarus and Russia, ushering in a new era of barbed-wire division.
Air traffic incident reports had decreased in recent weeks, prior to Thursday’s closure of Vilnius airport.
Lithuania’s Vilnius airport closed briefly due to balloons
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Lithuania’s Vilnius airport closed briefly due to balloons
- Lithuania has said the balloons are flown by smugglers transporting contraband cigarettes
- Lukashenko has called the border closure a “crazy scam“
China’s Coast Guard holds patrols around disputed islands
- The waters around Diaoyu Islands, which Japan calls the Senkaku Islands, are disputed and claimed by both China and Japan
BEIJING: China’s Coast Guard said in a statement it conducted patrols in the waters around the Diaoyu Islands on Wednesday.
The waters around Diaoyu Islands, which Japan calls the Senkaku Islands, are disputed and claimed by both China and Japan. The two sides have repeatedly faced off in the waters, deploying patrol boats and urging the other to leave the area.
The waters around Diaoyu Islands, which Japan calls the Senkaku Islands, are disputed and claimed by both China and Japan. The two sides have repeatedly faced off in the waters, deploying patrol boats and urging the other to leave the area.
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