A drone attack on an ammunition depot in Crimea has led to civilian evacuations and disrupted transport, Russian authorities have said.
Sergei Aksyonov, the Russian-installed governor of occupied Crimea, said Ukraine was behind the attack, without providing evidence.
Mr Aksyonov said local residents living within five kilometres of the blast were being evacuated.
Rail services across the Kerch bridge have also reportedly been halted.
Earlier on Saturday, Russian authorities stopped traffic on the bridge, but then swiftly reopened it to cars.
A later update from the Moscow-installed government said road traffic was again halted until further notice.
Mr Aksyonov said infrastructure facilities in the Krasnogvardeysky district in Crimea were the target.
“According to preliminary data, there were no damages or casualties,” Mr Aksyonov wrote on a Telegram post.
The BBC has not been able to independently verify the attack.
The Kerch bridge, often referred to as the Crimea bridge, was opened in 2018 and it enables road and rail access between Russia and Crimea - Ukrainian territory annexed by Russia in 2014.
The bridge has become a symbol of Russian occupation and is also an important re-supply route for Russian forces in southern Ukraine.
On Monday, a blast on the bridge killed two people and damaged the road but the railway line, which runs parallel to it, was not damaged.
The Kremlin blamed Kyiv for Monday’s attack and said Ukraine had carried out a “terrorist” act. Russian President Vladimir Putin vowed to retaliate and accused Ukraine of launching a “senseless” and “cruel” attack.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has said the Crimea bridge is a legitimate target.
Speaking on Friday he said the bridge was “the route used to feed the war with ammunition and this is being done on a daily basis”, adding that Kyiv sees it as “an enemy facility”.
“So, understandably, this is a target for us,” Mr Zelensky said, in a video address to the Aspen security conference in the US.
Monday’s alleged attack was the second major incident on the Kerch bridge in the past year.
In October 2022, the bridge was partially closed following a huge explosion. It was fully reopened in February.
Surely its time for Ukraine to put this bridge out action for good!..definitely a legitimate target…
I don’t know why they haven’t yet, main supply line to an occupied region. Bomb that bridge into splinters!!
Maybe it’s difficult to reach it with enough firepower? It’s probably under heavy surveillance by the Russians.
It was called by putin the safest structure on the planet that is protected by 20 different systems.
This bridge not only is important for the military, but also for putin’s ego.
Why Ukraine didn’t attack it earlier? According to Russia they shouldn’t be able to attack it now.
Anyway if the bridge falls, Russia would be able to supply soldiers only via eastern routes, which all are now under artillery range.
They did attack it earlier. The earlier attack put the rail lines out of commission for a bit and managed to get the road down to a single lane. Then it was repaired. Russia has air superiority in that area. They are not so good at catching remote operated (autonomous?) boat bombs.
It’s pretty hard for them to reach with the weapons they have. Storm shadows can do it but it’ll take several, and at least right now, I suspect Ukraine gets more out of using them to go after depots and generals.
Also, they get some benefit to threatening the bridge without taking it out. Right now Russia keeps soldiers and anti missile systems protecting the bridge. Once it’s blown up Russia can send those things to the front.
I’m guessing they’re most likely to take it out after they cut off the northern route.
Bridges are actually pretty difficult to take out if you can’t get in to hit specific weak points and if you’re willing to just keep running the risk of crossing over damaged bridges and maybe lose everything on it.
It’s exacerbated by the Black Sea being a relatively gentle body of water, so even if you pop the top, it might slam back down in such a way that’s it’s still usable and because there isn’t as much perpendicular pressure from the sea or wind, it’s easier for it to just kinda settle there and just slowly degrade away rather than collapse into utter non-functionality all at once.
You’re just spitballing about the “pop the top” “slam back down” in a useful way, right? I mean, Russia showed it could mend the bridge already, so the explosive payload that Ukraine can deliver or how it is being deployed is insufficient to render the bridge useless. It very well could be psyops—packing just enough punch to choke down the bandwidth of the bridge and encouraging the civilians there to second guess their decision to remain.
EDIT: I’m seeing others on here who are getting downvoted for suggesting that the attack on the road is a terror attack. I found myself at first thinking, “fuck these people, it’s fine.” Then I felt bad and wondered if there is some rule about it, but I didn’t search. Now I’m finding myself defining the issue: what are the ethics of a State at war, in furthering the defense of its sovereignty and territorial integrity, intentionally scaring a occupying civilian population to encourage it to leave, while avoiding any direct action against the population itself?
War fucking sucks. When Ukraine successfully drives back the occupation… by the power of Grayskull it will be a time for wisdom and grace.
How? To destroy such a resilient object like the bridge, you’d need extremely powerful bombs that could only be dropped from planes. This would have to be an incredibly precise operation involving numerous planes and pilots, both of which are scarce and difficult to replace. The Russian army may face many problems, but their air defense is operational. Crimea is the top 1 priority for Putin.
Get out of Ukraine’s Crimea and maybe you won’t have this problem, Russia.
Is this bridge over the Crimea River?
Once again this targets the civilian traffic of the bridge and not the rail line that would actually affect the military supply.
I can’t see any other reason for wasting himars missiles like this. There’s no strategic benefit to targeting the road especially given that it gets repaired in days, it’s literally just an act of terror against civilian traffic. My assumption is that this is one of the small groups acting outside of central command. It can’t be a central decision because it’s just so obvious that it doesn’t advance any strategic objectives.
0% chance the road is repaired in days, and the road is used for military logistics.