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Why is Lithuania's main international airport closed due to smuggling of balloons?

The Lithuanian capital Vilnius was closed down for four nights last week due to smuggling balloons that floated over the border. Authorities branded it as a "hybrid" attack by the Kremlin's ally.

The airport is located 30 km (19 miles) away from Belarus and thousands of passengers have been affected.

Lithuania, which is a NATO member and a European Union state, has closed its border with Belarus to the end of November as retaliation. It also threatened NATO Article 4 consultations in case these incidents continued.

What is known about these balloons?

What are they?

High-altitude balloons filled with hydrogen or helium can fly wherever the wind takes, but their altitude is controlled remotely by the ground.

Meteorologists use them to determine weather conditions in stratosphere which begins at 15 km (9.3 mi) above the ground.

The Vilnius government claims that smugglers have repurposed them to transport cheaper cigarettes from Belarus to Lithuania. This is because a crisis in 2021 over a surge of migrants crossing the border led to tighter restrictions on the movement across the land border.

The smuggling ballons were first spotted in 2023 and became widespread in 2024, when they reached several hundred.

The balloons pass the border at a height of 3-4 km. Smugglers can communicate with the balloon in Lithuania to track its position and tell it where to land.

A balloon is usually able to carry 500- 1,500 packs, each of which costs less than one euro. In Lithuania, the same brand cigarettes cost 4.5 euros.

Why are the balloons a problem?

The balloons are flying at the same height as airliners that approach an airport. This increases the risk of a collision.

Recently, local rules have been updated to include balloons as a mid-air threat.

Recently, Lithuanian authorities fine-tuned the detection systems they use to determine whether any balloons identified pose a danger to civil aviation.

What happens to the cigarettes?

Lithuania claims that smuggled cigarettes manufactured in Belarus are consumed by many Lithuanians.

In 2024, the Lithuanian Border Guard confiscated over 1.4 million illegal cigarettes. Of these, 1.2 million were marked to be sold in Belarus.

Why did Lithuania close its border with Belarus?

The Lithuanian government has said that Belarus authorities contribute to the problem, by not crackingdown on smugglers in their country. They have dubbed the situation as a "hybrid assault".

What is the position of Belasis?

If they are going to Lithuania, and there are air balloons filled with cigarettes or other things flying around, then the answer is there. "They are not flying in to nothing, someone there is receiving them," said Alexander Lukashenko.

He called the Lithuanian border closure a "crazy swindle" and accused the West, in turn of waging an hybrid war against Belarus, Russia, and ushering in a brand new era barbed-wire divide.

Maxim Ryzhenkov, Foreign Minister of Belarus, called Lithuania's action "a provocation" and said it was intended to justify anti-Belarus sanction.

WHY ARE THE BALLOONS NOT SHOT DOWN?

The Lithuanian government originally said that they weren't being shot down due to the danger posed by their payloads. These can weigh as much as 50 kilograms or 110 pounds if they fall uncontrollably.

Inga Ruginiene, the Prime Minister, told the Army on Monday to use "kinetic" measures to destroy the balloons. She didn't elaborate, citing the need for security. (Reporting from Andrius Sytas, Vilnius; Editing by Mark Heinrich.)

(source: Reuters)