
Drone Strike on Bus Carrying Belarusian Children Fuels Accusations and Denials
A fatal attack on a youth football team’s coach in Russia’s Bryansk region has drawn sharp condemnations from Moscow and Minsk, a flat denial from Kyiv, and calls for restraint from the United Nations.
A Ukrainian drone struck a civilian coach carrying a Belarusian children’s football team as it travelled through Russia’s Bryansk region on 17 June, killing a female chaperone and wounding at least eight people, six of them minors. The team from Gomel was heading to a holiday camp in Gelendzhik on the Black Sea coast when the fixed-wing unmanned aircraft hit the double-decker bus on the A240 highway, a route that runs parallel to the Ukrainian border and lies within range of Kyiv’s longer-range drones. Russian officials said the operator would have clearly seen the target was a passenger vehicle, and the Kremlin immediately labelled the incident a terrorist act.
Viewed from Moscow, the attack was a deliberate attempt to sow panic among civilians. President Vladimir Putin telephoned Health Minister Mikhail Murashko to order urgent medical assistance, while Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova demanded international condemnation, warning that silence would encourage further “bloody crimes.” Russia’s Investigative Committee opened a terrorism case. In Minsk, the reaction was equally sharp but carefully calibrated. The Belarusian Foreign Ministry condemned the strike as “an act of terrorism against the peaceful population” and demanded “exhaustive explanations” from Ukraine, yet also pointedly reminded organisers of the need to avoid sending citizens, especially children, into conflict zones. President Alexander Lukashenko, who has long sought to avoid being drawn directly into the war, dispatched medical evacuation helicopters but made no immediate public statement, a restraint noted by independent Belarusian media.
From Kyiv came a categorical denial. A spokesman for the Ukrainian General Staff said the armed forces had not used any drones against targets in Bryansk region at the time of the incident, dismissing the reports as false. The claim was amplified by some pro-Ukrainian social media channels, which suggested the strike might have been a Russian provocation intended to implicate Ukraine and pressure Belarus. At the United Nations, a spokesman for the secretary-general reiterated that attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure are prohibited under international humanitarian law and must cease immediately, though the statement stopped short of assigning blame. The Collective Security Treaty Organisation, a Moscow-led military alliance, condemned the attack and expressed condolences to Belarus.
The episode underscores the increasingly blurred front lines of a conflict in which long-range drone warfare regularly reaches into Russian border regions. It also tests the delicate position of Belarus, which hosts Russian forces and weaponry but has not committed its own troops to the fighting. Analysts in European capitals note that while the Kremlin is likely to use the incident to reinforce its narrative of a terrorist Kyiv regime, the absence of independent verification leaves room for competing accounts. The attack on a bus full of children, whatever its origin, adds a volatile new element to an information war that already shapes diplomatic and military calculations on all sides.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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A Ukrainian drone deliberately struck a bus carrying a Belarusian children's football team, killing a woman and injuring several minors. The attack exposes the terrorist nature of the Kyiv regime, which does not hesitate to target civilians. Moscow and Minsk will respond harshly to this crime.
A Ukrainian drone struck a bus carrying a Belarusian youth football team in the Bryansk region, killing a woman and injuring several children, Russian authorities said. A criminal investigation has been launched.
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