By Liv Clarke
Copyright manchestereveningnews
The UK Foreign Office has issued an update on Polish airspace after multiple Russian drones were shot down over Poland overnight. According to Poland’s prime minister Donald Tusk, 19 Russian drones entered the country’s airspace on Tuesday night during strikes on western Ukraine and up to four were shot down by Polish and Nato aircraft, BBC News reports. Polish prime minister Donald Tusk wrote on social media that Polish airspace was violated by multiple Russian drones, saying: “Those drones that posed a direct threat were shot down.” The Polish armed forces said on Wednesday morning that a search for possible crash sites is ongoing and urged people not to approach, touch or move any objects they see, warning that they may pose a threat and could contain hazardous material. Never miss a story with the MEN’s daily Catch Up newsletter – get it in your inbox by signing up here Warsaw’s Chopin Airport suspended flights for several hours, citing the closure of airspace due to military operations. The UK Foreign, Commonwealth, and Development Office has issued an update on its travel guidance for Poland today, Wednesday September 10. It stated that the country’s airports are now open but warned that there could be disruption. It said: “Poland’s airports are open but there may be travel disruption. Follow official Polish government announcements and updates from airlines.” Several European leaders said they believe Russia is intentionally escalating the war in Ukraine, and Nato is discussing the incident in a meeting. It came three days after Russia’s largest aerial attack on Ukraine since the war began, an assault that hit a key government building in Kyiv for the first time. European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said: “Russia’s war is escalating, not ending. Last night in Poland we saw the most serious European airspace violation by Russia since the war began, and indications suggest it was intentional, not accidental.” Polish airspace has been violated multiple times since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, but there has been nothing on this scale either in Poland or in any other Western nation along the eastern flank of Nato and the European Union. Leaders in the strategically located Baltic states of Lithuanian, Latvia and Estonia – Nato members who are nervous about Russian aggression – expressed deep concerns. “Russia is deliberately expanding its aggression, posing an ever-growing threat to Europe,” Lithuanian president Gitanas Nauseda wrote on X. Estonia’s foreign minister Margus Tsahkna said that the overnight attacks on Ukraine and violations of Polish airspace were “yet another stark reminder that Russia is not just a threat to Ukraine, but to all of Europe and Nato”. Join the Manchester Evening News WhatsApp group HERE Prime Minister Sir Keir said he had been in touch with Mr Tusk to make clear the UK’s support for Poland and Ukraine, and thanked Nato and Polish forces for their rapid response. “This morning’s barbaric attack on Ukraine and the egregious and unprecedented violation of Polish and Nato airspace by Russian drones is deeply concerning,” Sir Keir said in a statement. “This was an extremely reckless move by Russia and only serves to remind us of President Putin’s blatant disregard for peace, and the constant bombardment innocent Ukrainians face every day.” Bernard Blaszczuk, mayor of the village of Wyryki in Lublin region, told TVP Info that a house was hit by “either a missile or a drone, we don’t know yet”. He said people were inside the building, but nobody was hurt. In August, Poland’s defence minister said that a flying object that crashed and exploded in a cornfield in eastern Poland was identified as a Russian drone, and called it a provocation by Russia. In March, Poland scrambled jets after a Russian missile briefly passed through Polish air space on its way to a target in western Ukraine, and in 2022, a missile that was likely fired by Ukraine to intercept a Russian attack landed in Poland, killing two people. Nato said its air defences supported Poland, and chief spokesperson Allison Hart said the military organisation’s 32 national envoys will discuss the matter at a pre-planned meeting. Col Martin O’Donnell, a spokesman for Nato’s Supreme Allied Powers Europe, said: “This is the first time Nato planes have engaged potential threats in Allied airspace.” Dutch prime minister Dick Schoof confirmed in a message on X that Dutch F-35 fighter jets stationed in Poland under Nato provided support to the Polish air force overnight. Mr Schoof said: “Let me be clear: the violation of Polish airspace last night by Russian drones is unacceptable. It is further proof that the Russian war of aggression poses a threat to European security.” German Patriot defence systems in Poland were also placed “on alert”, and an Italian airborne early warning plane and an aerial refueler from Nato’s Multinational Multi-Role Tanker Transport aircraft fleet were launched, Col O’Donnell said. Nato is “committed to defending every kilometer of NATO territory, including our airspace”, he added. Meanwhile, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said in a message on Telegram that the deployment of European aircraft to intercept the drones was an “important precedent”. Russia must know the response to escalation “will be a clear and strong reaction from all partners”, Mr Zelensky added. Ukraine’s Air Force says Russia fired 415 strike and decoy drones, as well as 42 cruise missiles and one ballistic missile overnight. Ukrainian air defences intercepted or jammed 386 drones and 27 cruise missiles, according to the report. Russian drones injured three people in Ukraine’s western Khmelnytskyi region, its head Serhii Tiurin wrote on Telegram early on Wednesday morning. He said a sewing factory was destroyed, a gas station and vehicles were damaged, and windows in several houses were blown out. One person was killed and one injured in Zhytomyr region overnight, regional administration head Vitalii Bunechko wrote on Telegram, while homes and businesses suffered damage. In Vinnytsia region, Russian drones damaged “civilian and industrial infrastructure”, according to regional head Natalia Zabolotna. Nearly 30 residential buildings were damaged and one person was injured. In Cherkasy region, several houses and a power grid were damaged in a Russian attack. The Russian defence ministry said it had destroyed 122 Ukrainian drones over various Russian regions overnight, including over the illegally annexed Crimea and areas of the Black Sea. For more of today’s top stories, click here.