Russian strike hits train station in Ukraine, killing one and injuring 30

Smoke rises over a passenger train hit by today's Russian drone strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, at the railway station in the town of Shostka, Sumy region, Ukraine October 4, 2025. Press service of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine in Sumy region/Handout via REUTERS

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Two Russian drones struck trains at a station in Ukraine's
northern Sumy region, killing one person and injuring about 30 others,
officials said on Saturday, with Ukraine's foreign minister accusing Moscow of
deliberately hitting passenger trains.
"A brutal Russian drone strike on the railway station
in Shostka, Sumy region," Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy wrote on
Telegram, posting a video of a wrecked, burning passenger carriage and others
with their windows blown out.
Ukraine's foreign minister Andrii Sybiha accused Russia of
deliberately conducting two strikes on passenger trains.
"This is one of the most brutal Russian tactics — the
so-called ‘double tap’, when the second strike hits rescuers and people being
evacuated," he said in a statement released by his ministry on social
media.
Sumy region governor Oleh Hryhorov said eight people had
been taken to hospital.
"The Russians could not have been unaware that they
were targeting civilians. This is terrorism, which the world has no right to
ignore," Zelenskiy wrote.
Moscow has stepped up its airstrikes on Ukraine's railway
infrastructure, hitting it almost every day over the last two months.
Russia has repeatedly denied targeting civilians in its war
in Ukraine, although many thousands have been killed by its military.
In a video interview from a train en route to the strike
site, the CEO of Ukraine's state rail company Oleksandr Pertsovskyi told
Reuters that the drones had targeted locomotives, also damaging the carriages
attached to them.
"In essence, they are hunting for locomotives," he
said, adding that Russia was increasingly deploying this tactic.
He said the trains hit had been a local commuter service and
another train headed to the capital, Kyiv.
The rail chief added that there was only civilian traffic at
the station, and that he believed this was an attempt to make areas like
Shostka, which is about 50 kilometres (30 miles) from the Russian border,
unsafe for passenger traffic.
"They are doing everything to make frontline and border
areas uninhabitable, so that people are afraid to go there, afraid to board
trains, afraid to gather at markets, and so that students are afraid to return
home."
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