<p>Kyiv: The online systems of Ukraine's state-owned railway company Ukrzaliznytsia have been targeted by a large-scale cyberattack, the railway said on Monday.</p><p>Train traffic has been stable and running without delays, it said on Telegram. Work to restore the online systems has been going on for the past day.</p><p>The railway said it will sell tickets offline on Monday before back-ups are recovered after what it called a "systemic, non-trivial and multi-level" attack.</p><p>After the Russian invasion in 2022 and the closure of airspace over Ukraine, trains became the main mode of transportation for domestic and international passengers.</p><p>The railways carried around 20 million passengers and 148 million tonnes of freight last year, Ukraine's Deputy Prime Minister Oleksiy Kuleba said in December.</p><p>The outage was first reported on Sunday when Ukrzaliznytsia notified its users about the failure in the IT system and told passengers to buy tickets on-site or on trains.</p>
<p>Kyiv: The online systems of Ukraine's state-owned railway company Ukrzaliznytsia have been targeted by a large-scale cyberattack, the railway said on Monday.</p><p>Train traffic has been stable and running without delays, it said on Telegram. Work to restore the online systems has been going on for the past day.</p><p>The railway said it will sell tickets offline on Monday before back-ups are recovered after what it called a "systemic, non-trivial and multi-level" attack.</p><p>After the Russian invasion in 2022 and the closure of airspace over Ukraine, trains became the main mode of transportation for domestic and international passengers.</p><p>The railways carried around 20 million passengers and 148 million tonnes of freight last year, Ukraine's Deputy Prime Minister Oleksiy Kuleba said in December.</p><p>The outage was first reported on Sunday when Ukrzaliznytsia notified its users about the failure in the IT system and told passengers to buy tickets on-site or on trains.</p>