The State Secretary of the Security Council of Belarus, Alexander Volfovich, advised Belarusian citizens to avoid traveling to Russia due to security risks.
The statement followed reports in Russian media claiming that a drone struck a passenger bus traveling from Minsk to Anapa while it was in Russia’s Bryansk region.
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According to the Belarusian state news agency BELTA, Volfovich urged citizens to heed previous warnings from the government regarding travel to Russian border areas.
“We warned you, the president has repeatedly spoken out and said: dear Belarusians, refrain from traveling to Russia today, especially to the border regions,” Volfovich stated. “Drones fall there every day, such bad incidents happen. We did not close the border, it is everyone’s decision whether to go or not.”
Volfovich added that citizens traveling to Russia expose themselves and their families to significant danger, stating that safety cannot be guaranteed during the ongoing military conflict.
Belarusian state television channel ONT initially broadcast a quote from Volfovich suggesting the bus was hit randomly, but the quote was later removed. The independent Belarusian portal Zerkalo noted a discrepancy between the statements from Minsk and Moscow, pointing out that Russian Ambassador Boris Gryzlov had previously accused Ukraine of a “planned attack” on the vehicle.
Ukraine denies involvement
The General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine denied any involvement in the incident involving the bus in the Bryansk region. In a statement to Interfax-Ukraine, Major Andriy Kovalyov, spokesman for the General Staff, characterized the Russian claims as a deliberate provocation.
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