Finnish authorities scramble fighter jets; defence chief says false alarm but warns of potential repeats while Russian war persists.A Hornet fighter of the
Finnish Air Force flying above
Helsinki,
Finland, May 15, 2026 [Lehtikuva/Markku Ulander/via Reuters]Published On 15 May 2026Finland has stood down its defence forces after sounding an alarm over suspected drone activities in its airspace.The authorities said on Friday that suspected drone activity above the
Helsinki region no longer posed a threat and that the situation was returning to normal hours after launching an emergency response, including the launch of fighter jets and closure of the capital’s airport.Recommended Stories list of 4 itemslist 1 of 4Latvian prime minister resigns after drone incidentlist 2 of 4Russia launches hundreds more drones at
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Ukraine killing sixend of listThe alarm illustrates the tension stalking the region as
Finland and the Baltic states eye Russian aggression and daily missile and drone attacks amid Moscow’s continued war on
Ukraine.The
Helsinki City Rescue Department had warned the nearly 2 million inhabitants of
Finland’s Uusimaa region to stay indoors starting about 4am local time (1:00 GMT), as fighter jets were scrambled.
Helsinki’s airport was also closed for about three hours.Later, President
Alexander Stubb wrote on X that authorities had “demonstrated their readiness and capacity to react”, adding that the country was now facing “no direct military threat”.Kimmo Kohvakka, director general for rescue services at the Ministry of the Interior, called the response a “precautionary measure” and said “daily life can continue.”The incident arose amid growing concerns about regional spillover from the
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Ukraine war.The Baltic states of
Estonia,
Latvia and
Lithuania have reported a series of suspected Ukrainian drones headed for
Russia entering their airspace, prompting domestic criticism over their ability to respond to military threats.The situation has led to a full-blown government crisis in
Latvia. Prime Minister
Evika Silina resigned on Thursday after a coalition partner pulled support. The move followed the ousting of the defence minister after a drone crashed at a fuel storage facility.In March, two drones crossed into Finnish territory and crashed after flying low over the sea and southeastern
Finland.Finnish authorities did not indicate the source of Friday’s drone activity.However, defence forces operations chief Kari Nisula suggested that
Finland had received information from
Ukraine about drones potentially straying into the country, according to the Reuters news agency.The military head added that there was no evidence that drones had entered
Finland, but that such situations could happen again as long as
Russia continues its war on
Ukraine.Prisoner swapThe incident in Finnish airspace unfolded as
Ukraine maintained its drone attacks on Russian oil and energy infrastructure, and Kyiv continued counting the costs of a huge strike that killed two dozen people.
Russia’s Ministry of Defence said on Friday that its air defence systems shot down 355 Ukrainian drones targeting Moscow overnight, as well as the border regions of Belgorod, Bryansk and Kursk.Among the targets was an oil refinery in the central city of Ryazan, about 200km (125 miles) southeast of Moscow, according to the commander of
Ukraine’s drone forces.Fire and a plume of smoke rise in the vicinity of the Ryazan oil refinery, May 15, 2026 [Reuters]The attack killed three people and wounded 12, regional Governor Pavel Malkov wrote on Telegram. Two high-rise apartment buildings were struck, he said, while debris fell on the grounds of an industrial enterprise.Meanwhile in Kyiv, the death toll from a Russian barrage on an apartment building on Thursday rose to at least 24 people, including three children, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said. Forty-eight people were wounded.Amid the ongoing violence,
Russia and
Ukraine have moved ahead with a prisoner swap that saw 205 POWs repatriated on each side on Friday. It was the first step of a swap that is planned to ultimately see 1,000 people on each side return home.The two sides also conducted an exchange of those killed in the fighting, with
Russia handing 526 bodies to
Ukraine and receiving 41 in return. Both Kyiv and Moscow thanked the United Arab Emirates for mediating the swap.Zelenskyy wrote on social media that most of the prisoners returned to
Ukraine had been in Russian captivity since 2022.“We will continue to fight for every single person who remains in captivity,” he said.