Lithuania to shoot down helium balloons smuggling thousands of cigarettes – Bundlezy

Lithuania to shoot down helium balloons smuggling thousands of cigarettes

In this undated photo released by the State Border Guard Service, an officer inspects a balloon used to carry cigarettes into Lithuania, because Belarussian smugglers often use them to ferry the contraband into the European Union (State Border Guard Service via AP)
Drug smugglers have for years used weather balloons to get cigarettes into Lithuania (Picture: AP)

Balloons packed with smuggled cigarettes keep drifting into Lithuania from Belarus, causing travel chaos.

Vilnius Airport was closed four times last week after balloons containing as many as 1,600 black-market cigarettes were blown into its airspace.

Airport officials said on Monday that 170 flights have been disrupted by the balloons, impacting more than 27,000 passengers.

On Sunday alone, 47 flights to and from Vilnius Airport were cancelled, delayed or diverted, with radars picking up 66 objects travelling from Belarus into Lithuania.

Vilnius, Lithuania - April 29, 2025: The main entrance of Vilnius airport featuring flags and travelers arriving under a partly cloudy sky
Vilnius, one of Lithuania’s main airports, has been closed four times in the past week (Picture: Getty Images)

Prime Minister Inga Ruginienė said at a press conference today that the Baltic country will shoot down the balloons and close the borders.

She added following a meeting of the National Security Commission: ‘We are sending a signal to Belarus that no hybrid attack will be tolerated, and we are taking the strictest measures to stop such attacks.’

The military will take ‘all necessary measures’ to stop the balloons,’ Ruginienė said, declining to elaborate what she meant by this.

Lithuania may also discuss invoking NATO Article 4, which would force a meeting of the alliance to discuss if a member is being ‘threatened’.

The Medininkai and Šalčininkai border crossings with Belarus have been closed, though diplomats can still hop over the lines and EU citizens and Lithuanians can enter from Belarus.

Lithuania’s anti-drug smuggling laws will be strengthened, including tougher fines and possible prison sentences.

Tensions are already high after waves of drones have been whizzing above European airports, with many pointing fingers at Russia.

Belarusian Minister of Foreign Affairs Maxim Ryzhenkov said Lithuania is ‘provoking’ Belarus by closing the border.

The minister told local media, according to the Lithuanian news agency BelTA, that smugglers using the balloons is nothing new.

‘But notably, we received no formal notes. They could not even identify what those balloons were or what they carried,’ he added.

Ryzhenkov said to close the border with Belarus, a key ally of Russia, is ‘anti-Russian’.

Lithuania has struggled for more than a year with the contraband-carrying weather balloons, Ruginiene said.

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Aleksander Kalka/NurPhoto/Shutterstock (15521705s) Lithuania's Prime Minister Inga Ruginiene speaks as she participates in a press briefing with Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk in Warsaw, Poland, on October 7, 2025. The main topics of the bilateral meeting are defense and security cooperation on the NATO eastern flank amid the ongoing Russian full-scale aggression on Ukraine, further support for Ukraine, and migration policy. Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk Meets Lithuania's PM Inga Ruginiene, Warsaw, Poland - 07 Oct 2025
Prime Minister Inga Ruginiene said the army will shoot down the balloons (Picture: Aleksander Kalka/NurPhoto/Shutterstock)

‘Last year we were blind chickens and didn’t see many things. Thank God, there was no catastrophe,’ she added.

‘We didn’t see certain moving objects, so there were no decisions to close the airspace.’

If a plane were to smash into the balloons, the collision would be ‘dramatic’ as their cargo can weigh as much as 60kg, said Vidas Kšanas, safety director at Lithuanian Airports, a company which manages Vilnius, Kaunas and Palanga airports.

Weather balloons are popular with drug smugglers in the Baltic country as they only cost as low as £10, with the helium to pump it tallying £150, experts told the Lithuanian news outlet tv3.lt.

Smugglers launch the balloons, intended to monitor air pressure and humidity, by the border.

They rise up to an altitude of up to 8km, where border guards can no longer see them, before catching the wind to travel at up to 200kmph.

Smugglers likely attach GPS sensors to the balloons to track where they land.

Lithuanian prosecutors have launched 13 pre-trial investigations into the weather balloons so far.

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