Droni all’aeroporto di Copenhagen : voli dirottati


COPENHAGEN, Sept 23 (Reuters) - Danish police said on Tuesday that drones that shut the country's main airport a day earlier appeared to have been flown by "a capable operator" seeking to demonstrate certain abilities, adding that no suspects had been identified.
The airports in Copenhagen and Oslo, the two busiest in the Nordic region, were shut for hours after drones were observed in their airspace late on Monday, leaving tens of thousands of passengers stranded as flights were diverted.
"We have concluded that this was what we would call a capable operator," Danish police Chief Superintendent Jens Jespersen told reporters on Tuesday, referring to the drones observed in Copenhagen.
"It's an actor who has the capabilities, the will and the tools to show off in this way," Jespersen said, adding that it was too early to say if the incidents in Denmark and Norway were linked.

NO COMMENT ON ZELENSKIY POST​

Danish police declined to comment on a post on X by Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, without providing evidence, that Russia was behind the Copenhagen airspace violation.
"I can't say anything about that. It's not because I don't want to, it's because I simply don't know," Jespersen said.