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“Extremely rare” 300-ton Russian rail recovery crane destroyed in partisan sabotage operation, ATESH claims

7 June 2026 at 12:25

Fire engulfs a rail recovery crane in Russia’s Voronezh region, which ATESH claims was destroyed during a sabotage operation targeting Russia's railway infrastructure. Screenshot from video: ATESH

Pro-Ukrainian partisan movement ATESH says its agents carried out a sabotage operation at a railway station in Russia’s Voronezh Oblast, destroying a rare heavy-duty rail recovery crane used by Russian Railways.

The group said the target was an EDK-300/5 rail recovery crane, a specialized system used for large-scale emergency rail restoration work. ATESH claims the equipment is no longer in production and exists in only limited numbers across Russia’s rail network.

According to the statement, the crane was designed for heavy railway accident response tasks, including lifting derailed rolling stock, clearing damaged infrastructure, and restoring traffic on key lines. It reportedly had a lifting capacity of up to 300 tons.

A heavy rail recovery crane used by Russian Railways for emergency repair and derailment response. Illustrative photo: ATESH
A heavy rail recovery crane used by Russian Railways for emergency repair and derailment response. Illustrative photo: ATESH

“Even in the deep rear, critical equipment is not safe from destruction”

ATESH said the loss of the crane would reduce Russia’s ability to rapidly repair damaged rail infrastructure, particularly at major transport junctions where recovery speed is critical for maintaining logistics flows.

The group added that the impact of the loss would be long-lasting, saying: “Replacement of the destroyed crane will require significant time and resources. While Putin’s army searches for a replacement, the railway hub and regional logistics are operating with limited recovery capacity.”

“Even in the deep rear, critical equipment is not safe from destruction,” they added.

The report has not been independently verified.

ATESH: sabotage network operating inside Russia

ATESH is a clandestine resistance network operating inside Russian-controlled territory and within Russia itself. The group says it focuses on reconnaissance and sabotage operations against military, transport, and communications infrastructure that it considers to be supporting Russia’s war effort against Ukraine.

ATESH statements are typically released via Telegram and often include claims of damage to rail assets, depots, and logistical hubs. The group also claims to have agents operating inside the Russian armed forces, which it says helps it gather intelligence and identify targets.

Wider campaign targeting Russian logistics infrastructure

The operation is part of a wider campaign aimed at disrupting Russian transport infrastructure, which the group says supports both civilian logistics and military supply chains.

ATESH has increasingly focused on rail assets inside Russia, arguing that even limited damage to specialized equipment can create disproportionate delays across tightly connected transport networks.

Previous claimed strike in Saint Petersburg

In a previous claimed operation in May, ATESH said its agents set fire to a locomotive in Saint Petersburg used for oil transport, taking it out of service and disrupting rail operations in Russia’s northwestern logistics network.

The group said the locomotive had been part of fuel transport routes linked to industrial supply chains and export corridors in the northwest of the country, including areas connected to port infrastructure.

A locomotive used in oil transport was set on fire in Saint Petersburg, Russia, according to claims from the partisan network ATESH.

The group says its agents carried out the sabotage operation, taking the engine out of service and disrupting rail logistics tied to fuel and… pic.twitter.com/2c6ChkG7TR

— Euromaidan Press (@EuromaidanPress) May 21, 2026

Russia reportedly restricts bus and private car movement on main arteries through occupied territories, capping two weeks of land-corridor breakdown

6 June 2026 at 16:19

ukraine launches logistics lockdown program $113 million middle-strike drones against russian rear · post destroyed military vehicles mariupol-melitopol road occupied southern telegram/@ukraine_context deep behind lines трасою маріуполь-мелітополь tg ukraine_context news

Russian occupation authorities are restricting regular bus traffic and private car movement on two main transport routes through occupied Ukraine, starting 6 June, due to what they call Ukrainian "attacks on civilian transport," Espreso reports, citing Russian media. 

The restrictions cover the R-280 "Novorossiya" highway connecting Rostov-on-Don through Mariupol, Berdiansk, and Melitopol to Simferopol, and the R-150 highway connecting Belgorod through Starobilsk, Luhansk, and Donetsk to Mariupol, the two main arteries through Russian-occupied territory in Ukraine.

Russia uses these routes to supply its occupation forces. The invaders' framing of the closures as protection against Ukrainian "attacks on civilian transport" comes the same week Ukraine's partisan units documented Russian forces using ambulances, bread vans, and postal trucks to deliver military fuel to the front line on those same routes.

What do restrictions cover? 

The R-280 highway is the main land artery connecting Russia to occupied Crimea, running from Rostov-on-Don to Mariupol, Berdiansk, Melitopol, and Simferopol.

The R-150 highway covers the northern arc: Belgorod to Starobilsk, Luhansk, Donetsk, and Mariupol.

Russian occupation authorities in the occupied Luhansk Oblast recommended that local residents not travel these routes, while noting that internal bus services would continue along altered routes.

Transport of organized groups of children through the region is temporarily banned, and suburban train service is suspended. 

Two-week breakdown of land corridor

The 6 June restrictions cap a two-week sequence of corridor breakdown driven by Ukraine's "logistics lockdown" campaign.

On 29 May, Ukraine's Main Intelligence Directorate (HUR) released a video of drone strikes on Russian fuel tankers along the Berdiansk-Melitopol-Crimea section of the same R-280.

By 31 May, Mariupol residents were reporting in local group chats that Russia had closed the Manhush-Berdiansk highway, which is the eastern segment of the same artery.

By 3 June, Russia's gasoline crisis had spread to St. Petersburg, Belgorod, Kursk, and the occupied Luhansk Oblast, with 40% of Russian refining capacity offline.

On 5 June, Russia ordered fuel drivers to wear civilian clothing. On 6 June, Russia closed civilian transport on the R-280 and R-150.

What do closures mean? 

The closures reshape daily life across Russian-occupied southern Ukraine. Civilians can no longer travel between major occupied cities on regular buses. Meanwhile, private cars are restricted on the main arteries. 

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