“Many people from Russia come here to pick up their relatives, and from Moldova they come to pick up their families.

Almost everyone from Pridnestrovie who contacted us is leaving for Russia.

If from Moldova, then there is already 50 to 50: someone to Russia, someone to Europe,” the carrier said.

According to the carrier, many residents of Transnistria have Russian citizenship, and Russians are not allowed through Europe without visas.

The company added that those who have Russian passports are offered to fly by plane, but tickets now cost about 100,000 Transnistrian rubles.

The carrier said that some citizens are trying to leave through Moldova and Transnistria to Odessa, others go to Ukraine through Poland.

Earlier, the official representative of the Russian Foreign Ministry, Maria Zakharova, said at a briefing that Moscow was alarmed by the escalation of tension in Transnistria, regarded the incidents in the region as acts of terrorism and expected a thorough investigation of all the circumstances of the incident.

On April 25, it was reported that a series of explosions occurred in the building of the Ministry of State Security of Transnistria in Tiraspol.

In connection with what happened in Pridnestrovie, a "red" level of terrorist threat was declared, events related to May 9 were canceled, and some schools were transferred to a remote work format.