
Munich Airport was temporarily shut down overnight after several drone sightings in the area, the latest mysterious drone overflights in the airspace of European Union member countries, officials said.
Germany's air traffic control restricted flights at the airport shortly after 10pm on Thursday and then halted them altogether, airport operators said in a statement. Seventeen flights were unable to take off, affecting almost 3,000 passengers, while 15 arriving flights were diverted to three other airports in Germany and one in Vienna, Austria.
Flights in and out of the airport resumed at 5am (0300 GMT), said Stefan Bayer, a spokesman for Germany's federal police at Munich airport. Authorities were unable to provide immediate information about who was responsible for the overflights.
A statement from the airport early Friday said there had been "several drone sightings," without elaborating. Bayer said it wasn't immediately clear how many drones might have been involved. He said police, airline employees and "regular people around the airport" were among witnesses who reported the drone sightings.
After the closure of the runways, federal police deployed helicopters and other means to try to track down the drones, but no signs of them could be found, Bayer said.
Hundreds of stranded passengers spent the night in cots set up in terminals or were taken to hotels and blankets, drinks and snacks were distributed to them, the German news agency dpa reported.
The incident was the latest in a series of incidents of mysterious drone sightings over airports as well as other critical infrastructure sites in the EU in several European Union member countries. A drone incident in Oslo, the capital of Norway, which is a NATO member but not part of the EU, also affected flights there late last month.
It wasn't immediately clear who has been behind the flyovers, but European authorities have expressed concerns Russia could be behind them. Russian authorities have rejected claims of involvement in recent drone incidents in Denmark.
Officials in Russia and close ally Belarus acknowledged last month that some drones used as part of Russia's war in Ukraine had entered the territory of EU and NATO member Poland, prompting a scramble by Polish and NATO allies in which fighter jets were deployed to shoot them down.
The drone overflights were a major focus of a summit of EU and European leaders in Copenhagen, Denmark, this week. Authorities have vowed to step up measures to minimise and thwart the threat posed by drones.
Separately, a Russia-linked oil tanker that authorities in France detained - and which had been suspected of possible involvement in the drone incursions over Denmark - was back at sea on Friday.
A thorough search by French Navy commandos that boarded the ship found no drones, no drone-launching equipment and no evidence that drones had taken off from the vessel, according to an official with knowledge of the investigation who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorised to discuss it publicly.
The ship-tracking website Marine Traffic showed that the tanker was navigating at sea again on Friday morning, heading southwest from the French Atlantic coast, where it was detained and apparently bound for the Suez Canal.
French authorities said before it departed that the tanker's captain would go on trial in February over the crew's alleged refusal to cooperate when French authorities stopped and boarded it.
An investigation led by the French Navy concluded that the ship, originating from Russia and en route to India with a "large oil shipment," was flying no flag, according to French prosecutor Stéphane Kellenberger.
The tanker's name has changed several times, and it's now known as "Pushpa" or "Boracay." Its route from a Russian oil terminal into the Atlantic took it past the coast of Denmark.
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