Romania says drone that hit building was Russian Geran-2
Translated from Croatian, summarized and contextualized by DistantNews.
At a glance
- Romanian authorities stated that a drone that crashed into a building near the Ukrainian border was a Russian-made Geran-2.
- Technical analysis of drone fragments, including Cyrillic inscriptions and electronic components, confirmed its Russian origin, according to the Romanian president.
- The incident resulted in the hospitalization of a 14-year-old boy and a 53-year-old woman, marking the first drone crash on residential buildings outside Ukraine since Russia's invasion.
Romanian authorities have definitively identified a drone that crashed into a residential building in Galati as a Russian-made Geran-2. President Nicusor Dan presented findings from a technical report, stating Cyrillic inscriptions like "ะะะ ะะ-2" were found on fragments. He asserted that analysis of electronic components, navigation systems, and structural elements revealed identical characteristics to previously found Geran-2 drones on Romanian territory.
The drone that crashed in Galati on Thursday evening is a Geran-2 of Russian origin. This is the unequivocal conclusion of the technical report finalized by Romanian state experts.
Physical and chemical analyses further confirmed the presence of materials and fuel consistent with this drone series. The drone entered Romanian airspace during a Russian military attack on Ukraine, according to officials. This incident marks the first time a drone has crashed onto a residential building outside of Ukraine since Russia's full-scale invasion in February 2022.
On the fragments found, the Cyrillic inscription "ะะะ ะะ-2" was identified. Analysis of electronic components, navigation systems, control modules, engines, and structural elements reveals similarities, even identical characteristics, with those of other Geran-2 drones previously found on Romanian territory.
The crash led to the hospitalization of a 14-year-old boy and a 53-year-old woman. The Russian embassy in Bucharest accused Kyiv of staging provocations, while President Vladimir Putin initially stated that the drone's origin could not be definitively determined without thorough analysis. However, Romania's defense minister, Radu-Dinel Miruta, confirmed on Friday evening that serial numbers on recovered components undeniably pointed to Russian manufacturing.
Physical and chemical analyses confirmed the presence of the same types of materials and fuel as those repeatedly identified in drones of this series.
Originally published by Veฤernji List in Croatian. Translated, summarized, and contextualized by our editorial team with added local perspective. Read our editorial standards.