Friday, November 28, 2025 - A military court in Russia on Thursday, November 27, convicted eight people on terrorism charges over a 2022 attack on the bridge linking Russia to illegally annexed Crimea. This bridge is a crucial supply route for Kremlin forces in the war with Ukraine, and the court sentenced all of the defendants to life in prison.
The October 2022 attack occurred when a truck bomb detonated,
destroying two sections of the bridge and requiring months of extensive
repairs. The blast killed the truck driver and four other people in a nearby
car. Moscow immediately denounced the attack as an act of terrorism and
retaliated by bombarding Ukraine’s civilian infrastructure, targeting the
country’s power grid over the subsequent winter.
The Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) has since claimed
responsibility for organizing the attack.
Eight people, including Russian, Ukrainian, and Armenian
citizens, were arrested. Five others, including Ukrainian and Georgian
nationals, were charged in absentia.
Those charged, including Artyom and Georgy Azatyan, Oleg
Antipov, Alexander Bylin, Vladimir Zloba, Dmitry Tyazhelykh, Roman Solomko, and
Artur Terchanyan, faced charges of carrying out a terrorist attack and illegal
arms trafficking, with Solomko and Terchanyan also accused of smuggling
explosives.
The Russian authorities accused the defendants of aiding
Ukraine in organizing the attack. However, all of those arrested have denied
the charges and insisted they were unaware the truck carried explosives,
according to Russian media reports.
Lt. Gen. Vasyl Maliuk, head of the SBU, stated in a 2023
interview that he and two other "trusted staff members" prepared the
attack and used other people without their knowledge.
The military court in Russia’s southern city Rostov-on-Don
began trying the accused behind closed doors in February 2025. The Russian
authorities have accused Maliuk of organizing the attack.
Antipov, an entrepreneur whose logistics company handled the
shipment, addressed the courtroom after the verdict, vehemently insisting on
his innocence.
“We are innocent. We are innocent,” he said. “We all passed
the polygraphs. We all proved our innocence. We cooperated fully. We went to
law enforcement ourselves and gave our testimony. Not a single person has
testified against us. All the witnesses say we are innocent. All the evidence
says we are innocent.”
The 19-kilometer bridge over the Kerch Strait that links the
Black and Azov seas carries heavy significance for Moscow, both logistically
and psychologically. It serves as a vital artery for military and civilian
supplies and acts as an assertion of Kremlin control over the peninsula it
illegally annexed in 2014.
After Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in
February 2022, Ukraine has attacked the bridge twice: in October 2022 with the
truck bomb, and again in July 2023 with sea drones, which killed two
people.
The bridge, which carries road and rail traffic on separate
sections, is the longest in Europe and a subject of considerable pride in
Russia. It was built despite strong objections from Ukraine and remains the
most visible and constant reminder of Russia’s claim over Crimea.

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