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Drones Hit Signal Radio Plant In Russia's Stavropol, Russia

  • 26.07.2025, 8:19

The company is one of the main manufacturers of electronics for the army.

In the early morning hours of July 26, explosions were heard in the Russian city of Stavropol. Russians complained of an attack by Ukrainian drones, Observer reports.

The city recorded the arrivals, with reports of a likely hit on the local Signal radio factory. Dozens of videos of the attack have appeared online.

What is known

According to Russian media, explosions in Stavropol began to sound from 5 am. Some propagandists specify that only four drones were allegedly seen over the city.

"Locals report that the drones are flying from the direction of Mikhailovsk. Residents heard rumbling and saw UAVs at low altitude over the Bely Gorod housing estate. Explosions were heard in the industrial area," one of the Russian channels wrote.

Some sources talk about five arrivals - in the same place.

In the meantime, the Russian Defense Ministry said more than 50 Ukrainian drones had been "destroyed." There was no mention of the Stavropol region in the report at all.

Russians filmed and posted dozens of videos online of the drone flying over and hitting a multi-story non-residential building in an industrial zone. It was identified as the local Signal radio plant.

"In Stavropol, the Signal radio plant is located near the Yuzhny market, so hundreds of people were witnesses to the drone attack," the VCHK-OGPU Telegram channel specified.

The plant is one of the largest enterprises of the radio-electronic complex in southern Russia. One of the priority and promising directions in the plant's activity is the production of subscriber and professional equipment for digital television and radio broadcasting.

In addition, there is a wide range of products for general industrial use: equipment for cathodic protection of underground metal structures from electrochemical corrosion, electricity metering devices, various modifications of electrical panels.

Since 1993, the radio plant began mass production of protective disconnection devices.

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