Bomb threat reports are massively arriving at email addresses in Ukraine
Kyiv • UNN
On January 30, mass bomb threat messages began arriving at email addresses of government agencies, educational institutions, and other facilities in Ukraine. The police received over 1100 reports, 20% of which have been processed, and the information has not been confirmed.

On Friday, January 30, mass messages about the mining of their buildings began to arrive at the email addresses of state authorities, local self-government bodies, educational institutions, enterprises, banking institutions, entertainment establishments, and other facilities in Ukraine. This was reported by UNN.
Details
One such message was received by the UNN editorial office. This letter, in particular, contains a demand to leave the mined premises.
The author of the message called himself a soldier of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, "a disabled sapper who receives a miserable monetary allowance and cannot provide for his relatives."
I and my like-minded people, starting from 10.01.2026, have planted about 500 explosive devices in administrative buildings, schools, kindergartens, and places of mass gathering of people. From 30.01.2026 to 31.01.2026, at different times, the timer on the bombs will be activated, and you will have 15 minutes to leave your building, otherwise you will die and there will be casualties among the civilian population.
In case of his death, the author asked to consider the leadership of Ukraine, along with Volodymyr Zelenskyy, "guilty of all troubles."
According to sources in law enforcement agencies, as of 11:30, more than 1100 reports had been received by police units. About 20% have been processed. Information about mining in these cases has not been confirmed. Processing continues.
Recall
On January 30, in Kyiv, unknown persons reported about the "mining" of a number of state institutions, educational institutions, and enterprises. Law enforcement officers noted that "such messages are often another information attack by the enemy, but despite this, each address is carefully checked by police patrols."