Finland says it restricted air and sea traffic in south due to Ukrainian attack near St Petersburg

Finland has officially confirmed that it restricted air and maritime traffic in the Gulf of Finland on the morning of 4 July because of a Ukrainian attack on targets on the outskirts of St Petersburg.
Source: Yle, Finland's national public broadcasting company, citing Defence Minister Antti Häkkänen; European Pravda
Details: Häkkänen confirmed that restrictions lasting about four hours in the Gulf of Finland on the morning of 4 July were linked to a Ukrainian UAV attack on targets inside Russia. He said the measures were precautionary and that the situation was not considered serious enough to warrant issuing air-raid warnings for residents along the Gulf of Finland coast.
The Finnish military ultimately recorded no violations of the country's airspace.
Quote from Häkkänen: "We were prepared to counter the drones using fighter jets, helicopters and naval equipment had they strayed off course. But in the end they didn't."
More details: Häkkänen noted that such precautionary measures may become more frequent.
Quote from Häkkänen: "Ukraine is highly likely to continue these successful strikes on Russia. It sees that Russia is sustaining significant damage and that this will increase pressure on Moscow to make peace. So I believe the attacks will continue.
Finns must be prepared for the fact that drone-related incidents near our borders are definitely going to continue."
Background:
- On 4 July, the Finnish Defence Forces reportedly imposed temporary restrictions on air and maritime traffic in the eastern part of the Gulf of Finland from 05:18 to 09:18 local time, which is the same as Kyiv time.
- This is the second time they have done so this week: restrictions were also imposed in the early hours of 2 July.
- On the night of 3-4 July, the Russian authorities claimed that drones had attacked Moscow. Strikes near St Petersburg were later reported.
- Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy later said that the targets near St Petersburg were port oil infrastructure used to finance Russia's war in Ukraine and the military base in Kronstadt.
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