A tragic scene unfolded on the roads of Russia’s Bryansk region when a bus carrying members of a Belarusian youth soccer team was struck by a drone, killing a woman who was traveling with the group and wounding six others, among them four teenagers.
Diplomatic Repercussions
Belarusian officials swiftly moved to protest the attack, summoning Ukraine’s chargé d’affaires, Ivan Novitsky, and delivering a formal note of protest through the Belarusian Foreign Ministry, which demanded an immediate, objective investigation and called for punishment of those responsible.
Russia’s security services opened a terrorism probe into the incident, while Russian and Belarusian authorities jointly accused Ukraine’s military of deliberately targeting the vehicle, a claim that Kyiv flatly denied, dismissing the allegations as a provocation.
Ukraine’s human rights ombudsman, Dmytro Lubinets, offered to take part in a transparent and impartial fact‑finding mission, insisting that all circumstances be examined without bias.
President Alexander Lukashenko, speaking on state television, asserted that the drone was of Ukrainian origin and warned that any attempt to draw Belarus into the broader conflict would end disastrously for those trying to do so.
The episode also underscores Belarus’s long‑standing role as a staging ground for Russian operations since the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, a partnership that continues to shape regional security dynamics.