The train was going from the town of Klimovo to Moscow and was in the Vygonichsky district when the collapse happened, officials said.
Project leader, Ben Knight, said their final performance would take place at the Bristol Beacon on 5 June.Project Zulu arranges for choirs from South African townships to tour the UK every two years.
Mr Knight said UWE students studying professions such as teaching, engineering and occupational therapy were sent out to the township in South Africa annually to "spend a few weeks making valuable contributions to the educational life of schools in the township".Then every two years a choir, made up of children from two partnership schools, are brought over to Bristol to spend three weeks performing and sharing their talent and culture."They've been busking, they've put on concerts," he said.
Mr Knight explained the tour aimed to raise money for the two schools involved."They are over here sharing their extraordinary talents and culture but also earning money to develop their educational opportunities back home," he said.
He said this year, one school planned to use the money to develop solar energy and the other hoped to buy IT equipment.
"Every penny that is made goes directly back to their schools," he said.Gen Breuer's remarks are yet another sign of a significant change in attitudes in Germany towards defence and Russia.
Like many Western nations, including the UK, it has scaled down its investments in its military over many years.But there has been a growing recognition of the need to reverse this, with even the Green Party coming onboard a recent vote to lift restrictions on Germany's defence spending.
But as Western military and political leaders say they are ready for the fight, questions remain on whether this is a case of ambition outpacing reality.It will take years for Europe's military industrial base to crank up to speed to match anywhere near the scale of weaponry that Russia is churning out.