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Message: 20 Die in Russian Nuclear Sub Accident/ sad news

20 Die in Russian Nuclear Sub Accident/ sad news

posted on Nov 09, 2008 07:10AM

20 Die in Russian Nuclear Sub Accident

Source: Reuters

Posted: 11/09/08 9:47AM

Filed Under: World

By YURI MALTSEV

VLADIVOSTOK, Russia (Reuters) - Twenty people were killed on board a Russian nuclear submarine, the navy said on Sunday, in an accident that exposed the gap between the Kremlin's ambitions and its military capability.

The accident, which happened while the submarine was on sea trials in the Pacific Ocean, was the deadliest to hit Russia's navy since the Kursk nuclear submarine exploded beneath the Barents Sea in 2000, killing all 118 sailors on board.

Photo Gallery
AP Photo/NTV Russian Channel

Russian Sub Tragedy

The Nerpa (Seal), one of Russia's Shchuka (Pike) class (NATO reporting name: Akula) nuclear submarines, on board which at least 20 people were killed in an accident, seen heading to a Russia's Pacific Fleet base, about 6,400 km (4,000 miles) east of Moscow, shortly after the accident in this image made from television Sunday, Nov. 9, 2008.
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PHOTOS

Prosecutors investigating the latest incident said they suspected the victims died after inhaling a toxic gas used as a fire suppressant when the vessel's fire extinguishing systems went off unexpectedly.

It was not clear why the portable breathing gear usually issued to Russian submarine crews did not save them. A navy spokesman said the nuclear reactor was not damaged and the vessel was now in port.

"Twenty people died," the Prosecutor-General's Office said in a statement. "Results of a preliminary investigation show that death occurred as a result of freon gas entering the lungs."

Twenty-one people were injured and taken to a military hospital in Vladivostok. Many of those on board were civilian workers from the shipyard that built the submarine.

Vera Sanzhonova said she had driven to Bolshoi Kamen, the naval base where the submarine was moored, to seek word on her husband, a civilian technician who was on board.

"I have not received any news. My husband is neither on the list of those injured nor among the dead," she told Reuters.

"I've been driving here all the way down from Vladivostok, shedding tears and swallowing pills."

Asked if there was a hope her husband was alive she said: "None at all, just despair."

Kremlin Ambitions

President Dmitry Medvedev ordered the Defense Ministry to carry out a full inquiry, the Kremlin press service said.

The Kremlin is seeking to establish itself as a global power and is using the military to project its influence. A flotilla of warships is heading to U.S. foe Venezuela for the biggest maneuvers in the Caribbean Sea since the Cold War ended.

But analysts say the navy in particular is still struggling with the legacy of over a decade of under-funding, despite a cash injection in the past few years.

"This most recent incident signals that, though Russia is increasingly assertive and aggressive on the geopolitical stage, it still faces very real challenges in terms of the revitalization of its naval power," Stratfor, a U.S.-based consultancy, said in a commentary.

The navy said 208 people -- or nearly three times more than its usual crew -- were on board the submarine. Seventeen of the dead were employees of Amur Ship-Building Enterprise and three were sailors, prosecutors said.

"It is possible that some of the people lingered (putting on their breathing apparatus) or they did not have the apparatus at all," Ruslan Pukhov, director of military think tank the Center for Analysis of Strategies and Technology, told the Ekho Moskvy radio station.

The navy did not identify the submarine. Russian news agencies quoted naval sources as saying it was the Nerpa, classified by NATO as an Akula-class attack submarine.

Media reports said Russia had planned to lease the submarine to the Indian armed forces but there was no confirmation of this. In Delhi, a navy spokesman said it had no plans to purchase any submarines from Russia at the moment.

(Additional reporting by Dmitry Solovyov in Moscow and Delhi newsroom; Writing by Guy Faulconbridge and Christian Lowe; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

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