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Kursk recovery begins
By Vladimir Radyuhin
MOSCOW, OCT. 21. Deep-sea divers have begun preparations for
retrieving the bodies of the crew trapped inside the sunken
Russian nuclear submarine Kursk amid reports that destructions
inside the vessel are too massive to undertake the risky
operation.
The Kursk sank in the Arctic Barents Sea on August 12 after two
mysterious explosions ripped through the ship killing all the 118
crewmen on board. An international team of divers from Russia and
Norway arrived on the site of Russia's worst submarine disaster
on Friday aboard the Norwegian off-shore platform Regalia. After
a mini-sub explored the site of the wrecked submarine lying on
the seabed at the depth of 108 metres, divers went down to cut
holes in the 150-metre-long submarine hull. Some seven holes
measuring 0.6 by one metre are expected to be cut before divers
will try to enter the sunken submarine.
The Russian navy commander, Admiral Vladimir Kuroyedov, who is
personally in charge of the operation, warned the divers not to
take risks. Last week he said the recovery attempt would be
called off if it was felt the submarine's condition made it too
risky to search for bodies inside. Divers could face grave danger
from jagged metal debris inside the wreck that could puncture
their survival suits. Under a contract with the Norwegian oil
firm Halliburton, only Russian divers are to go inside the Kursk.
The operation could also be halted if weather conditions
deteriorate and waves exceed six metres.
Many experts have warned against undertaking the risky operation.
They argued that most bodies were destroyed or thrown out of the
submarine in the powerful blast and the few remaining corpses
would be impossible to retrieve from the mangled hull. The
Russian President, Mr. Vladimir Putin, pledged to retrieve the
bodies in an emotional meeting with relatives in August, but many
have since urged him not to rush the operation. In an open letter
to the President last month, victims' relatives urged him not to
risk divers' lives and wait till preparations had been made for
raising the submarine with the crew. The Government said such an
operation would be undertaken next year. Some marine experts have
cautioned that the holes to be made for retrieving the bodies
could weaken the submarine's structure, jeopardise the safety of
the Kursk's nuclear reactors and make it impossible to raise the
vessel.
A Russian daily on Saturday quoted naval sources as saying that
Government officials responsible for the salvage project were
just afraid to tell Mr. Putin the truth about the Kursk
condition, which transpired after a Russian unmanned mini- sub
filmed the submarine last month. According to the sources the
film, which was never made public, revealed that the Kursk's five
front sections had been totally destroyed, suggesting that the
remaining four had been too damaged inside to try to penetrate
them.
The cause of the explosions that destroyed the Russian submarine
is yet to be established. The Russian mini-sub which explored the
seabed around the Kursk failed to find any fragments of an alien
vessel to support the collision theory, favoured by a government
commission investigating the disaster. Several specialists said
the available evidence suggested that a misfiring torpedo engine
caused the first blast aboard the submarine which touched off a
fire, flooding and a catastrophic detonation of warheads on
board.
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