Russia kills 12 Ukrainian miners in deadly bus attack hours after peace talks postponed
A Russian drone strike hit a bus carrying miners in Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk region on Sunday, killing at least 12 people.
Ukrainian emergency services later reported the death toll had risen to 15 in one of the deadliest single attacks on energy workers since the start of the war.
The attack Sunday came a few hours after President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced a new round of peace talks between Ukraine and Russia had been postponed.
A spokesperson for DTEK, Ukraine’s largest private energy firm, which employed the workers, told Fox News Digital that drones had targeted the bus as it traveled “roughly 40 miles from the front line in central and eastern Ukraine.”
The DTEK spokesperson also described the incident as a “terrorist attack on civilian infrastructure.”
“This strike was a targeted terrorist attack against civilians and another crime by Russia against critical infrastructure,” the spokesperson added.
RUSSIA UNLEASHES MAJOR DRONE, MISSILE ATTACK ON UKRAINE AS US DIPLOMATIC TALKS CONTINUE
The bus was transporting miners after the end of their shift when it was hit by a Russian drone, the State Emergency Service of Ukraine also confirmed.
At least seven workers were injured, and a fire sparked by the impact was later extinguished by emergency crews.
“The epicenter of one of the attacks was a company bus transporting miners from the enterprise after a shift in the Dnipropetrovsk region,” the company also said in a statement.
Zelenskyy condemned the strike late Sunday, calling it another deliberate attack on civilians.
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Earlier in the day, he announced that the next round of trilateral talks involving Ukraine, Russia and the U.S. would now take place Feb. 4-5 in Abu Dhabi, after originally being expected for Sunday.
“Ukraine is ready for a substantive discussion, and we are interested in ensuring that the outcome brings us closer to a real and dignified end to the war,” Zelenskyy said on X, adding that the delay had been agreed to by all sides.
The delay followed a surprise meeting Saturday in Florida between Steve Witkoff, President Donald Trump’s special envoy, and Kirill Dmitriev, the Kremlin’s special envoy and head of Russia’s sovereign wealth fund.
The talks in Abu Dhabi are now expected to include representatives from Ukraine, Russia and the U.S., according to The Associated Press.
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Meanwhile, Zelenskyy warned Russia is stepping up its aerial campaign against civilian and logistical targets.
“Over the past week, Russia has used more than 980 attack drones, nearly 1,100 guided aerial bombs, and two missiles against Ukraine,” he wrote on X on Sunday. “We are recording Russian attempts to destroy logistics and connectivity between cities and communities.”
In a statement, DTEK CEO Maxim Timchenko also explained the bus attack marked the company’s “single largest loss [of] life of DTEK employees since Russia’s full-scale invasion.”
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“We can already say with certainty that this was an unprovoked terrorist attack on a purely civilian target, for which there can be no justification,” Timchenko said.
The attack marked “one of the darkest days in our history,” he added. “DTEK teams are working with emergency services on the ground in Dnipropetrovsk region to ensure the injured, and families who have lost loved ones, get all the care and support they need. Their sacrifice will never be forgotten,” he added.
Iran stages Khamenei photos to mask cracks in IRGC, opposition groups say
Iran’s regime released staged images of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in an attempt to show strength and boost a military under strain, according to opposition groups operating outside the country.
The photographs, published by Iranian state media Jan. 31, marked Khamenei’s first public appearance in weeks and showed him praying at the tomb of Islamic Republic founder Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini as regime officials issued new threats against the U.S. and Europe.
Ali Safavi, a senior official with the National Council of Resistance of Iran, said the images were aimed less at reassuring the public than at boosting morale among the regime’s weakening security forces.
“The images of Ali Khamenei were pure propaganda,” Safavi told Fox News Digital. “He wanted to show that he is not afraid of dying, but at the same time he is desperately trying to boost the morale of his demoralized forces.”
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Safavi said the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) remains the backbone of the regime’s power but is showing signs of strain after weeks of suppressing nationwide protests.
“These images are intended to project strength and shore up the repressive forces,” he said. “But underneath, the regime is reeling from the reality that its criminal clique cannot break the will of the people and Khamenei knows the situation will never return to what it was before Dec. 28.”
The release of the photos coincided with calls from the European Parliament to designate the IRGC as a terrorist organization.
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“The IRGC is the backbone of this regime,” Safavi said. “Its disintegration can only occur after a fundamental shift in the balance of forces and with the presence of organized resistance on the ground. Only then do defections at lower levels of the military become meaningful.”
Tehran reacted angrily to the European move with Iranian lawmakers appearing in IRGC uniforms in a highly choreographed show of solidarity, according to reports.
A banner reading, “The Revolutionary Guard is the largest anti-terrorism organization in the world,” was displayed at the speaker’s podium, and the IRGC flag was prominently featured, according to the Times of Israel.
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“We saw the same thing when the U.S. designated the IRGC a foreign terrorist organization in 2019,” Safavi said.
“More than half of these lawmakers are former IRGC commanders,” he added. “The IRGC dominates Iran’s economy and permeates the executive, legislative and judicial branches, as well as educational institutions.”
After the U.S. dispatched a naval strike group led by the USS Abraham Lincoln to the region, Khamenei also warned Sunday in comments reported by Iranian state media that any military action would trigger a wider regional conflict.
“We are not the ones who start a war,” Khamenei said . “But if America attacks or harms Iran, the Iranian nation will deliver a strong blow — and any war started by America will spread across the region,” he said per reports.
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President Donald Trump said Sunday that if Iran does not reach a deal on its nuclear program, “we’ll find out” whether Khamenei’s warning proves correct.
“Doing business with Iran means doing business with the IRGC,” Safavi said. “The IRGC is the regime — even the clerics.”
US ambassador to NATO warns the ‘ball’ is in Iran’s ‘court’ as Trump confirms negotiations taking place
U.S. Ambassador to NATO Matt Whitaker said President Donald Trump has made clear demands of Iran, and what happens next will be up to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, as an American naval fleet patrols the region. He added that Trump “won’t wait forever” for his ultimatum to be met.
“The president has been very clear on Iran… you can’t have a nuclear weapon, and you need to stop killing protesters in your streets,” Whitaker said Saturday on “The Big Weekend Show.”
“That’s a pretty clear red line.”
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Whitaker described the “armada that is sitting off the coast of Iran” as both a show of strength and an “off ramp.” He said the Iranians “could de-escalate very easily and simply” by abandoning nuclear ambitions and halting the suppression of protests.
“We’ll see. The ball is in their court,” he said. “But you know, President Trump is not going to be forever patient on this.”
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He emphasized that Trump’s aim was not to destabilize Iran amid reports that the president may be considering military action.
Trump said Saturday he believes Tehran is negotiating “seriously” with the U.S., and that he hopes an “acceptable” deal can be brokered.
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On Sunday, however, the speaker of Iran’s parliament said the Islamic Republic now considers all European Union militaries to be terrorist groups after the bloc declared the country’s paramilitary Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps a terror group over its crackdown on nationwide protests.
This action has created concern that Iran might strike U.S. NATO allies should America attack again, following Operation Midnight Hammer, which targeted Iranian nuclear facilities in June.