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Officials alter train schedule after drones strike historic museum in Russia annexed Crimea

Officials alter train schedule after drones strike historic museum in Russia annexed Crimea
Officials alter train schedule after drones strike historic museum in Russia annexed Crimea

Local authorities said on Wednesday that Ukrainian drones had hit a historical museum in Sevastopol, in Russia-annexed Crimea. They also reduced the number?nighttime train services in response to intensifying air strikes.

The museum is dedicated to the 1853-1856 Crimea War, which was fought between the Russian Empire and a coalition including the Ottoman Empire. In that war, Russia lost.

Mikhail Razvozhayev said that the roof of the museum was damaged on Telegram. He didn't provide any details on the damage, or if there were casualties.

"The enemy will be held accountable for this sacrilege!" Razvozhayev wrote in his early Wednesday morning post.

Sergei Aksyonov, the Crimea's Russian-installed Governor, said on Telegram that authorities had cut night train schedules after a drone strike this week killed a train assistant and injured a driver.

Fuel shortages are affecting the Black 'Sea Peninsula of Crimea after recent Ukraine drone strikes, just as the holiday season is about to begin.

Last week, Ukrainian President Volodymyr?Zelenskiy proposed face-to?face?talks? with Russian President Vladimir?Putin. He rejected the proposal. The Kremlin claimed that Ukraine undermined efforts to reach a peaceful solution to the conflict after the train accident.

A regional governor reported that the city of Novokuibyshevsk, in Russia's Samara Region, which is a major oil hub along the Volga River and hosts several refineries run by state-controlled Rosneft, had successfully repelled drone attacks.

Local media reported that authorities urged residents to take shelter in the city's one million inhabitants as public transport was suspended due to air raid alerts.

The Ukraine's continued attacks on the Russian energy infrastructure have forced Moscow to?cut its?oil production, which is third largest in the world.

The regional governor wrote on Telegram that falling debris from a UAV triggered a fire in a fuel tank located at a site for civilians.

On Telegram, the Mayor of Moscow also said that the city is repelling drone attacks.

According to local authorities, in a rare move, the remote oil-producing regions of Khanty-Mansiysk and Perm, as well as the industrial regions Chelyabinsk?and Sverdlovsk?in Ural Mountains thousands of kilometers (miles?) from Ukraine issued air raid warnings.

Could not independently verify reports. Reporting by Jekaterina Glubkova, Tokyo; editing by Neil Fullick

(source: Reuters)