When drones strayed over the Danube and crashed in Romania, Roxana Saraev felt uneasy. But ensconced in her seaside jewellery shop at the country’s easternmost tip, she has made up her mind -- she is not going anywhere. For the 32-year-old, her adopted home of Sulina remains an “oasis of tranquility” despite the war in Ukraine a few miles away.JOIN US ON TELEGRAMFollow our coverage of the war on the @Kyivpost_official. The conflict is “looming as a threat” in her mind, creating “a feeling of unease,” she told AFP. But having moved to Sulina five years ago, she opened the colourful store in February -- a testament to her will to stay. Reachable only via the river, Sulina was its normal quiet self when AFP visited the city in May. No air raid alerts rang out and no explosions boomed across the border. But the area is not always so calm, said Catalin Cosma, 33, who takes tourists on kayak trips on the Danube. During one outing, he saw drones hit the Ukrainian port of Vylkove across the river. “It was terrifying,” he said. “We sat there, lit a cigarette, poured ourselves a drink and said that was it. There was nowhere to go. Nothing you could do.” In four years of war, Romania has recorded 28 airspace breaches and 47 drone crashes, according to the defence ministry’s latest data. The most serious incident struck on May 29 in the centre of the city of Galati, 150 kilometres (93 miles) north of Sulina. A drone -- Russian according to NATO -- hit a residential building and injured a woman and her adolescent son.