An explosion on the railway tracks in the occupied Crimea on the morning of May 18, not far from the Chistenka station, caused predictable hysteria among the occupiers and Crimean collaborators.

Russian invaders, in the person of the criminal “minister of transport” Nikolai Lukashenko, are forced to admit that “about 150 meters of the railway is damaged”, and the criminal speaker Vladimir Konstantinov said “the task is to restore the movement completely within 24 hours”, although at first the occupiers’ propaganda announced it in “several hours” and that “electric trains from Sevastopol depart on schedule”, however, “for some reason” only to Bakhchisaray.

Trying to “smooth out” the understanding that is obvious to everyone of both the situation itself and its consequences, the criminal “blogger”, controlled by the Russian special services, Alexander Talipov, said that the aggressor’s punishers would pursue certain individuals who posted the consequences of the incident online. In addition, he proposes to “hang … video cameras” “everywhere every 100-200 meters” on railway poles and traffic lights and to “organize round-the-clock monitoring of the tracks”.

In this context, it should be recalled that the railway line from Simferopol to Sevastopol is constantly used by the occupiers as part of the ongoing Russian aggression, including by sea, to transport military cargo and stolen Ukrainian property.

Therefore, within the framework of international humanitarian law, no matter what actually happened on the morning of May 18 at the Chistenka station, it is certainly a legitimate military target.

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