
By Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Europe Bureau Chief
KYIV/BUDAPEST (Worthy News) – Residents were reeling Wednesday from the collapse of two bridges in Russian regions bordering Ukraine that killed seven people after authorities said they were “caused by explosions” in “acts of terrorism.”
In Russia’s Bryansk region bordering Ukraine, a blast caused a road bridge to collapse onto a railway line late Saturday, derailing a passenger train heading to Moscow and killing seven people, authorities said.
A separate rail bridge in the neighboring Kursk region was blown up hours later in the early hours of Sunday, derailing a freight train and reportedly injuring the driver.
Authorities did not say who was behind the explosions, but investigators said a criminal inquiry was underway.
However, Ukraine has been blamed for several attacks on Russia, including attacks on numerous military air bases across the country over the weekend that destroyed billions of dollars in military planes and facilities.
The Kremlin said that Russian President Vladimir Putin was briefed on the incidents throughout the night on the latest attacks against bridges. He has pledged to retaliate for these and other suspected Ukrainian attacks.
Videos posted on social media from the Bryansk region showed rescuers clambering over the mangled chassis of a train belonging to national operator Russian Railways. At the same time, screams could be heard in another video.
SEVEN DEAD
“There are seven dead as a result of the collapse of a bridge onto railway tracks,” Alexander Bogomaz, the Bryansk region’s governor, wrote on the social media platform Telegram.
Additionally, at least 71 people were injured, 44 of whom were in hospital, he told reporters.
In the incident in the Kursk region, a rail bridge collapsed onto a road, derailing a freight train.
“Last night… in the Zheleznogorsk district, a bridge collapsed while a freight locomotive was passing. Part of the train fell onto the road below the bridge,” Kursk region governor Alexander Khinshtein said on Telegram.
“One of the locomotive drivers suffered leg injuries, and the entire crew was taken to hospital,” he said.
A spokeswoman for Russia’s Investigative Committee said the incidents had been “classified as acts of terrorism” without elaborating.
But senior ruling party lawmaker Andrey Klishas blamed Ukraine, describing it as a “terrorist enclave.”
STRATEGIC TARGETS
Ukraine, which Russia has blamed for previous incidents, did not immediately comment.
Kyiv says Russia uses railroads to transport troops and weaponry to its forces fighting in Ukraine, which it invaded in February 2022.
As fighting continues, relatives waiting for loved ones arrive from the Bryansk region at a station in central Moscow. “Russian Railways said that those who had survived would be coming here,” said 30-year-old entrepreneur Sergey Trinkinets.
“My dad finally got in touch. He said he had some bruises and wasn’t feeling very well, so I came to meet him,” he told reporters.
In one video posted on social media, purportedly taken at the scene of the incident in the Bryansk region, someone could be heard screaming as eyewitnesses rushed to find help.
“How did the bridge collapse? There are children there!” a woman shouted in the video.
Moscow’s three-year assault on Ukraine is believed to have killed and injured more than a million people. Russia currently occupies around a fifth of its neighbor, far less than Moscow expected in more than three years of fighting.
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
More Worthy News
House Republicans have subpoenaed two current and former ActBlue officials as part of an escalating investigation into what lawmakers describe as potentially “widespread” fraud on the Democratic fundraising platform. The move comes amid a parallel probe ordered by President Donald Trump’s Department of Justice into alleged illegal contributions funneled through the site.
The U.S. Supreme Court will decide a case that seeks to remove a cap on how much political parties can spend on candidates.
In a historic move aimed at reshaping the Middle East’s geopolitical landscape, President Donald Trump on Monday signed an executive order lifting long-standing U.S. sanctions on Syria, marking a dramatic pivot in American foreign policy following the fall of the Assad regime late last year.
In a stunning diplomatic shift, Israeli officials confirmed Monday that Israel is in advanced talks with Syria and Lebanon as part of a broader effort to expand the Abraham Accords and reshape the regional balance of power.
With fireworks just days away, Senate Republicans entered a marathon stretch Monday morning in a dramatic race to pass President Donald Trump’s sweeping budget and tax overhaul, dubbed the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” before the self-imposed July 4th deadline. The legislation, a centerpiece of Trump’s second-term agenda, has triggered late-night floor fights, intraparty feuding, and a last-ditch effort to unite a narrowly divided Republican majority.
U.S. President Donald Trump renewed his public defense of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday, calling for all corruption charges against the longtime Israeli leader to be dropped and warning that the trial could sabotage sensitive negotiations with Iran and Hamas.
President Donald Trump firmly rejected any suggestion that his administration is offering sanctions relief or negotiating with Iran, dismissing recent speculation as “phony” and doubling down on his claim that Iran’s nuclear program has been decisively destroyed by U.S. and Israeli strikes.