Munich Airport resumes flights after the suspected drone is closed.

grey placeholderReuters police officers take a walk at the airport of Munich. After two runways at Munich Airport on Friday eveningReuters

The unidentified drone witnessed the second surgery in 24 hours and then resumed the flight at Munich Airport, Germany.

In Friday evening, the airport said that the flight was interrupted in the local time (20:30 GMT) and about 6,500 passengers were affected.

At least 17 flights were grounded in Munich evening on Thursday evening due to several drone witnesses in nearby airspace.

In recent weeks, it has been the latest case in a series of events related to drones that interfered with air in Europe.

On Saturday morning, Munich airport warned that the flights were “gradually increased,” but the delay was expected all day.

In a statement on the website, passengers urged them to keep checking their flight status before traveling to the airport.

According to the Belgian media, Belgian authorities say Thursday, Belgian authorities are investigating 15 drone witnesses on the El Senbon military site near the German border.

After witnessing, the drone flew from Belgium to Germany and was observed by the police of Düren, a small village in West Germany.

Officials could not identify where the drone began or who operated.

Alexander Dobrindt, German Interior Secretary, said he would be charged with a migration summit at the European Interior Meeting on Saturday, while he would raise defense problems.

At the beginning of Friday, the minister also promised to propose a proposed bill to make the police more easily requested to shoot down the unmanned aircraft.

City Hall: President Putin laughs at suspicions of Danish drones

Recent drones in the European Union have triggered the leader summit at Copenhagen earlier this week.

Some EU member states have supported the plans for the multilateral “drone wall” to quickly detect, track and destroy Russian drones.

Twenty Russian drones went to Poland, and the Russian MIG-31 jet recently entered Estonia’s airspace as a separate incident.

Copenhagen and Oslo airports were forced to be discovered near the airport and military air factories.

German prime minister Friedrich Merz said that the invasion of airspace ahead of the Summit is deteriorating and it is reasonable to assume that drones are coming from Russia.

Russia refused to participate and Danish authorities say there is no evidence that Moscow was involved.

On Thursday, Russian President Vladimir Putin, who talked with the summit in Sochei, Socchi, laughed at the proposal of ordering drones to Denmark.

Putin said, “I will never do it again, and I will never do it again for France or Denmark or Copenhagen.