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Plywood drone crashes in Lithuania, alarming

Unmanned aircraft made of plywood and foam crashed in NATO member Lithuania after flying into Belarus. The crash caused alarm, but authorities later determined that the aircraft was not dangerous.

According to their respective spokespersons, the Prime Minister Gintautas Palauckas and the Speaker of Parliament Saulius Skvernelis have been briefly taken to bomb shelters as a result of the object entering Lithuanian Airspace.

The NATO Baltic Air Policing Jets were sent to the area, but were then recalled when the object was found around 1 km (0.62 miles) away from the border. This was revealed by Gintautas Ciunis, the spokesperson for the armed forces at a press briefing.

He said, "The object is not dangerous at this time but we do not know its purpose." The investigation was continuing to find out what the object was and where it originated.

In a press release, the Lithuanian defence ministry stated that it appeared to be "homemade".

A video and images shared by the Army showed a device with wings that looked like a small plane lying on grass. The body of the device was cut in two places to reveal a wooden compartment with wiring.

A border guard sent an emailed statement stating that a preliminary assessment indicated that the object was made from plywood and foam and that there was no indication that it contained anything.

A Russian drone that was carrying explosives, likely intended for use in Ukraine, crashed in Latvia in September of last year. The drone was about 90 km (60 mi) away from the Belarus border. (Reporting from Andrius Sytas, Vilnius; Writing by Stine Jacobsen, Editing by Anna Ringstrom & Peter Graff).

(source: Reuters)