Russia’s oblasts near Ukraine suffer two deadly bridge failures. Explosions blamed, then denied
At least seven people were killed and dozens more injured after two bridges collapsed in Bryansk and Kursk oblasts overnight on 1 June, striking passenger and freight train routes and raising questions over infrastructure failures or sabotage. Russian law enforcement initially attributed the incidents to Ukrainian sabotage, but later removed the claim.
Train hit by collapsing highway bridge in Bryansk
According to the governor of Russia’s Bryansk Oblast, Alexander Bogomaz, a highway bridge on the federal A240 route allegedly collapsed onto a moving passenger train near the settlement of Vygonichi. The train was operating on the Moscow–Klimovo line. Regional sources, including Telegram channels such as Astra and Baza, reported that a freight truck was crossing the bridge at the moment of the collapse.
Bogomaz confirmed the incident involved both vehicles and a passenger train. Moscow Railway stated that the train derailment resulted from the collapse of the bridge, which occurred due to “illegal interference in transport operations.” The Russian Investigative Committee later reported the bridge had been blown up at 22:50 local time.
Astra published photos and videos of the aftermath.
As of the morning of 1 June, Russian reports indicated at least seven alleged fatalities and 66 injured individuals in the Bryansk collapse, with 47 hospitalized.
Freight locomotive derailed in Kursk after second bridge collapse
In Kursk Oblast’s Zheleznogorsky district, another collapse occurred on a railway bridge during the movement of a freight train. Acting governor Alexander Khinshtein reported that part of the train allegedly fell onto the highway running below the bridge. A fire broke out on the locomotive, and one crew member was reportedly injured.
The Investigative Committee of Russia, launched investigations into both incidents on terrorism-related charges.
Astra shared visuals showing the destruction at the 48th kilometer of the Trosna–Kalinovka road, confirming the scale of the incident.

Unconfirmed third incident
Telegram channels SHOT and 112 reported another incident in Bryansk Oblast, claiming that railway tracks were blown up near the settlement of Unecha on 1 June as a track inspection train was passing. Governor Bogomaz later stated that as of 10:52, railway workers discovered track damage in the Unecha–Zhecha section during an infrastructure inspection, with no casualties reported.
Previous Russian infrastructure collapses noted by Ukrainian Stratcom
Ukraine’s Centre for Strategic Communication listed prior incidents of Russian bridge failures, pointing to chronic infrastructure decay and mismanagement. These include:
- April 2024 – Vyazma, Smolensk Oblast: Paninsky overpass collapse killed one and injured five.
- October 2023 – Buryatia: A railway bridge over the Dzhida River collapsed due to rainfall and neglect.
- July 2022 – Zabaykalsky Krai: Bridge on the Chita–Khabarovsk highway fell due to erosion and neglect.
- November 2020 – Primorsky Krai: A bridge collapsed under a truck near Vladivostok.
- July 2018 – Nizhny Novgorod: A pedestrian bridge collapsed during a festival.
- May 2015 – Krasnoyarsk Krai: Logging truck caused a collapse near Kansk.
Stratcom concluded:
“Corruption and decay are Russia’s problems, not Ukraine.”