Two men opened fire on Russian soldiers at a military firing range near the Ukrainian border, killing 11 and wounding 15 — an attack the Kremlin said was carried out by terrorists. 

The attack came amid protests and large swaths of people fleeing the country after Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered hundreds of thousands of reservists to enter the war as part of a hasty mobilization to beef up Russia’s presence in Ukraine. 

The Russian Defense Ministry said the shooting happened in the Belgorod region in southwestern Russia that borders Ukraine. The two men were from an ex-Soviet country and opened fire on soldiers during target practice, the agency said. They were killed in the attack. 

Putin’s new mobilization of troops was coupled with a recent barrage of missile attacks in Ukraine. It appeared to be a response to the bombing that damaged the bridge linking Russia to the Crimean Peninsula a week ago and new gains by Ukraine to take back land the Kremlin said it has annexed. 

Meanwhile, Elon Musk, founder of SpaceX and Tesla, may be abandoning plans to ask the U.S. government to fund his Starlink satellite network in Ukraine after a Saturday tweet. USA TODAY has reached out to SpaceX for comment.

In the first weeks of the invasion in early March, Musk came to Ukraine’s aid when his SpaceX company shared its Starlink satellite system that helps deliver internet access to areas that lack coverage.

Friday, Musk, the world’s richest man, tweeted that it cost SpaceX about $20 million a month to support the system and that the company “cannot fund the existing system indefinitely.”

‘TAKE YOUR CHILDREN AND LEAVE’:Russian official urges Kherson residents as Ukraine presses offense

Other developments

►A Russian missile strike seriously damaged a key energy facility in Ukraine’s Kyiv region, Gov. Oleksiy Kuleba said Saturday, adding that there were no deaths or injuries. Repair crews are working to restore electricity but further outages are possible, the electricity transmission company Ukrenergo said.