At least eight people hospitalized following enemy drone strikes on passenger trains in Shostka – PGO
As of 13:00 p.m., at least eight people were hospitalized following enemy drone strikes on passenger trains in Shostka. An investigation has been launched, the Prosecutor General's Office (PGO) reports.
"According to the investigation, at approximately 11:50 a.m. on October 4, 2025, the enemy attacked a passenger train with a drone while it was waiting to depart at the Shostka railway station. A few minutes later, while passengers were being evacuated, another train was hit by a drone again. As of 13:00 p.m., at least eight people were hospitalized as a result of the occupiers' attack," the Telegram channel reported.
The massive attack on the city continues.
The pretrial investigation into the commission of war crimes (Part 1, Article 438 of the Criminal Code of Ukraine) is being conducted under the procedural supervision of the Shostka district prosecutor's office.
Advertising
Advertising
MORE ABOUT
Russian dpty Minister of Agriculture suspected of illegally transporting more than 4 mln tonnes of grain from TOT – PGO
13:28, 28.10.2025
Two injured due to Russian strikes in Zaporizhia region – authorities
17:39, 27.10.2025
Number of people injured by Russian drones in Kharkiv increases to 9 – prosecutor's office
15:30, 22.10.2025
In Kharkiv region, 62 people injured amid shelling in past 24 hours – authorities
09:15, 14.10.2025
NABU and SAPO notify PGO’s prosecutor of suspicion
12:07, 10.10.2025
LATEST
Dutch FM: Whatever election results, support for Ukraine will continue
20:11, 28.10.2025
Ukraine's court seizes assets of Belarusian Gomselmash linked to production of Shahed drone components – Justice Ministry
20:03, 28.10.2025
Prosecutor General's Office charges Russian Deputy Agriculture Minister with stealing UAH 23 bln worth of Ukrainian grain
19:57, 28.10.2025
Shmyhal, NATO officials discuss further European integration reforms, PURL initiative
19:55, 28.10.2025
Sybiha optimistic about further steps of partners regarding frozen Russian assets