Police say drone found at mine in western Poland


WARSAW, March 12 (Reuters) - ⁠Police in western Poland were investigating on Thursday ⁠the origin of a drone discovered by a ‌worker at a lignite mine and it did not appear to be a civilian model, a policespokesperson said.

NATO member Poland has ​been on high alert for airspace ⁠incursions since more than ⁠20 Russian drones entered its airspace on the night of ⁠September ‌9-10, 2025, and some of them were found in the east of the country.

"It ⁠doesn't look like a civilian drone, but there's ​no information ‌about the model," police spokesperson Maciej Swiecichowski told ⁠Reuters by ​phone from the western city of Poznan.

State broadcaster TVP Info cited sources as saying it was a Gerbera military ⁠drone. Gerbera drones are produced in ​Russia and are used as decoys.

Local police said on X earlier they had been alerted to an "Unmanned Aerial Vehicle ⁠of the drone type" found by an employee in Galczyce, Konin County, on the premises of the lignite mine.

Lignite, also known as 'brown coal', is a combustible ​sedimentary rock.

"At the scene, police officers ⁠from Konin and Poznan are securing the area," they ​said, adding that nobody had ‌been injured in the incident.

(Reporting by ​Anna Wlodarczak-Semczuk, Alan Charlish, Pawel Florkiewicz, Anna Koper, editing by Andrei Khalip and Gareth Jones)

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