By Steven White
Copyright mirror
An international airport has been forced to close after drones were spotted in the vicinity, causing major disruption on Monday evening.
Up to three UAVS were reportedly detected in the airspace over Copenhagen Airport in Denmark as police have swarmed the area. “We have a massive presence out there”, Henrik Stormer, the head of the Copenhagen Police, told reporters.
The airport closed to take-offs and arrivals at around 8.30pm local time, according to Naviair – the company repsonsible for traffic control at the airport. A post by FlightRadar on X (formerly Twitter said as of 10:05pm local time (8:05pm UTC), more than 35 flights bound for Copenhagen Airport had been diverted to other airports due to the drone situation.
While a post on X from the local police read: “[The airport] is currently closed for take-off and landing, as 2-3 large drones have been seen flying in the area. The time horizon is currently unknown.”
Most of the diverted flights headed to Malmö, Billund, Aarhus and Gothenburg. No information has yet been released on the possible origin of the drones.
A spokesperson for Copenhagen Airport confirmed that the airspace over the airport has been closed due to unidentified drones. They told Reuters: “Police are investigating the matter and we currently have to timeline for reopening.”
The news comes after a passenger jet came so close to colliding with a drone in May that the object “filled” the plane’s windscreen. The Airbus A320 had just taken off from London’s Heathrow Airport and was at 9,000 ft during the near miss.
A report revealed: “Both the Captain and First Officer saw a bright white object pass overhead from the opposite direction. The object appeared to be approximately 2-3m in size at the very least, it may have been larger as it filled a good proportion of the windshield. There was no appreciable separation vertical or horizontal,”
While in January in a separate incident, a drone came within 10m-20m of colliding with a Boeing 737 airliner on its approach to Gatwick Airport. Investigators said it was only due to “providence” that a more serious incident did not take place.
Official papers stated: “The B737 pilot reports passing over the south coast, descending into LGW, when the Captain saw a black object (believed to be a drone) in front of the aircraft. There was no time to take avoiding action and the object passed 10-20m on the right-hand side of the aircraft”