
Ukraine has issued an apology to Finland after several of its drones crashed in Finnish territory a day earlier, the Foreign Ministry in Kiev said on Monday.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Heorhii Tykhyi stressed that the drones had not targeted Finland deliberately.
"We can say with certainty that Ukrainian drones did not fly towards Finland under any circumstances," he told journalists in Kiev.
The most likely scenario, he said, was that the drones had been diverted from their original course by electronic jamming from Russian air defences.
Several Ukrainian drones crashed to the east of the south-eastern city of Kouvola near Finland's border with Russia on Sunday.
It came as Ukraine had been repeatedly targeting Baltic ports in Russia's western Leningrad region to disrupt Russian oil exports.
Kouvola lies around 70 kilometres from the region.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Finnish President Alexander Stubb also spoke about the incident during a phone call on Monday, according to the Ukrainian leader.
"Of course, we also discussed the drone incident that recently took place on Finnish territory," Zelensky wrote in an English-language post on X on Monday.
"Alex and I see the situation in the same way. We are sharing all necessary information."
Ukrainian drones have repeatedly strayed into the airspace of Russia's neighbours in the Baltic region and occasionally come down on their territories, most recently in Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Brexit's Effect on New York's Ascent as a Main Monetary Center - 2
Venice’s newest marvel is a wild, acrobatic dolphin. His refusal to leave puts him in danger - 3
What to know about cheese voluntarily recalled in 20 states - 4
'We need everyone,' wounded reservist urges Knesset panel to advance haredi draft law - 5
Explosions heard across Tehran after IDF announces wave of strikes on regime terror targets
Vote in favor of Your Fantasy Vehicle: Which Notable Model Catches Your Heart?
Greece eyes migrant repatriation centres outside the EU
Whale stranded off Germany for days found stuck again
Italy now recognizes the crime of femicide and punishes it with life in prison
Watch SpaceX launch NASA's Pandora exoplanet-studying satellite on Jan. 11
Key takeaways from Sen. Bill Cassidy's interview on 'Face the Nation' with Margaret Brennan
Netanyahu expects Iran's leadership to fall
PHOTO ESSAY: Scientists trying to unravel one of the body's biggest mysteries
Hidden Island Cameras Capture Rare Tasmanian Species for the First Time Ever













