Seven killed in drone attack on bus in Russia-controlled Donetsk region
Seven people were killed and 11 others injured when a passenger bus was hit by a drone in Russia-controlled parts of Ukraine, according to an official statement cited in the supplied material. The strike took place in the early hours of Wednesday in the Donetsk region, with the bus reported to have been travelling between Moscow and Simferopol in Russian-occupied Crimea. The incident adds to the civilian toll of the war in an area where transport routes remain exposed to attacks.
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Denis Pushilin, the Kremlin-installed leader of Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region, said the bus was struck while travelling through the area. The confirmed casualty figures in the supplied row are seven dead and 11 injured. The material does not identify the passengers, and it does not say whether the bus was on a scheduled service or carrying any particular group of travellers.
The attack comes a day after what Russian officials described as a massive Russian assault on cities across Ukraine that killed at least 22 people, including women and children. Russian officials also said more than 350 drones were downed overnight, including at least 50 over the Leningrad region northwest of Moscow. That region includes St Petersburg, where the annual International Economic Forum is due to open, with organisers saying delegations from more than 130 countries and territories are expected.
The incident matters because it shows how civilian transport remains vulnerable in the conflict, including in territory under Russian control. Passenger buses are a regular part of movement across occupied and contested areas, and strikes on them can have immediate humanitarian consequences. The timing also places the attack within a wider cycle of intensified drone activity and retaliatory strikes between Russia and Ukraine.
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The supplied material also points to a broader pattern of attacks on transport in southern Ukraine. It says Russian drones have been targeting public buses in Kherson, killing three transport workers so far this year. That detail suggests civilian transport has become a recurring target in parts of the war zone, with implications for local mobility, safety and the ability of residents to travel between towns and regions.
The available information does not say who launched the drone that hit the bus, and it does not give a precise location beyond the Russia-controlled Donetsk area. It is also unclear whether emergency services were able to reach the scene quickly or whether there was any military activity nearby. Further statements from local authorities, Russian-installed officials or Ukrainian officials would be needed to clarify responsibility and the full circumstances of the strike.
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