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11 March, 2022
Since the UAV hit the soft ground, an explosion occurred under the ground. Had it hit the asphalt or concrete, the consequences would have been catastrophic, HTV said in its prime-time evening news programme. The bulk of this Soviet-era military drone was pulled out of the ground on Sunday morning, and Defence Minister Mario Banozic confirmed that fragments of an aerial bomb and traces of explosive had been found in the crater, indicating that it was not a reconnaissance drone. Military analysts disagreed, telling the media that it was not an aerial bomb but a system for the self-destruction of the equipment and data. Brigadier Ivan Selak, a retired Croatian Air Force pilot, said he was almost certain that those were not the fragments of an aerial bomb because “had there been an explosive inside, half of the nearby student dormitory would have been blown away by the blast.” The drone, a Soviet-made Tupolev Tu-141 Strizh, crashed near a student dorm in the Jarun district of southwest Zagreb shortly after 11 pm on Thursday, damaging about 40 cars in a nearby car park. No one was hurt. It came from Ukraine, flying over Romania and Hungary, both NATO members, at a speed of 700 km/h at an altitude of 1,300 m, before entering Croatia’s air space and crashing down in Zagreb. (N1) ZAGREB: 11 March, 2022 Prime Minister, Andrej Plenkovic, confirmed that the object which crashed in the Jarun area of southwest Zagreb late on Thursday was a Russian-made military unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), adding that it is not yet known whether it was used by the Russian or Ukrainian military forces. The reconnaissance drone, which is 14 meters long and weighs 6 tons, is thought to have flown all the According to Hungarian Prime Minister, Viktor Orban, the drone had entered Hungarian airspace from Romania. Hungary, Romania, and Croatia are all members of Nato, so the incident raised questions about air surveillance
and air defense capabilities of the alliance. “Why it happened, was it due to an error, or loss of control, we cannot say for sure at this moment, but we do
know that the drone was flying over Croatia for several minutes before crashing down in Zagreb,” Plenkovic said. “Fortunately, there were no casualties because the drone fell in an area where there are no houses or apartment buildings (in the immediate vicinity)… We have contacted Ukrainian authorities to see if they know how did this drone reach Zagreb. In any case, we will make a maximum effort to find out why it According to data released by the Croatian Defense Ministry, the aircraft had entered the country’s Croatia and Ukraine are separated by Hungary. Zagreb is about 600 kilometers away from the Ukrainian border as the crow flies, and about 750 kilometers from the largest city in southwest Ukraine, Ivano-Frankivsk, which was hit by Russian air strikes early on Friday morning. “This is an unprecedented event, something like this has never happened in Zagreb. In a situation when people of Zagreb have already been traumatized by the (March 2020) earthquake and the pandemic, an incident like this can certainly not be pleasant… Nobody was hurt and that is good. It was quite a large drone. Considering the time of day and where the debris fell, it is really unbelievable that nobody was hurt,” Zagreb Mayor, Tomislav Tomasevic, told reporters at an emergency news conference on Friday.
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