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Officials say that Poland has fixed the fault that temporarily disrupted flights.

Polish authorities confirmed that they have fixed the fault in their air traffic control system which briefly disrupted Saturday morning take-offs from Warsaw and several other cities. Operations are now back to normal.

By midday, the Chopin Airport in Warsaw reported that take-offs & landings had resumed as normal. Outages earlier forced the authorities to restrict flights in Polish airspace.

There were also problems reported at airports in Krakow and Katowice, as well as Gdansk.

The Polish Air Navigation Services Agency, PANSA, wrote in a press release that the temporary problems were due to a fault which was quickly resolved. It did not provide any further information on the fault.

The agency reported that the "primary air traffic management system" was fully restored after all the necessary procedures were implemented. It added that backups kept safety systems operating during the outage.

The Interior Ministry had earlier stated that the security agency investigated the outage, and conducted routine checks to look for sabotage.

Russia has denied the accusations. (Reporting and editing by Karol Badohal, Jason Hovet and Andrew Heavens; with reporting by Karol Bádohal and Jason Hovet)

(source: Reuters)