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| The photo shows an AS-28
mini-sub, of the same model with the stranded Russian sub. (Photo:
Xinhua/AFP) |
MOSCOW, Aug. 5 (Xinhuanet) -- The Russian military is
racing the clock Friday to salvage a mini-submarine stuck in the Pacific seabed
and its seven crew members in a rescue operation that is expected to be joined
later by Japan, the United States and Britain.
Rescue vessels from the Russian Pacific Fleet have
managed to catch an underwater object in their trawling nets, but it was unclear
whether it is the trapped mini-submarine, a spokesman for the Pacific Fleet told
the Interfax news agency.
"I would estimate the situation to be 51 percent in
our favor,"the spokesman said.
"The cable is being strained now. If it is the
mini-submarine, then it will be pulled up to a depth of 100 meters, so that
divers could work on its body," he said.
The AS-28 mini-submarine got entangled with a fishnet
Thursday night on the seabed off the Kamchatka Peninsula, about 200 km south of
Kamchatka's regional capital Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky. The submarine was at a
depth of 190 meters, too far down to allow the crew to evacuate.
Russian Pacific Fleet Commander Admiral Viktor
Fyodorov said a comprehensive operation to rescue the mini-submarine will start
ina few hours time. Ten vessels, including two rescue ships and a sea towboat,
are currently involved in the operation.
Reports on supplies aboard for the crew varied from
one to three days worth of food, water and oxygen, but medical experts warned
conditions on the vessel are worsening.
Fyodorov told Russia's Channel One television that
the submarine had only enough air onboard to last "a bit more than 24 hours,"
but he was later quoted by Interfax as saying the vessel had enough air to last
until Aug. 8.
Russia asked Japan, the United States and Britain to
assist the rescue operation hours after the news of the accident broke out.
Japan's Defense Agency has dispatched four vessels of
the Maritime Self-Defense Force to join the rescue efforts but it would take
three to four days for the vessels to reach the accident site.
A US plane carrying 30 rescuers and two unmanned
Super Scorpio deep diving submarines is set to leave San Diego, California, at
10:30 p.m. Moscow time (1830 GMT) and expected to arrive in
Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky at 7:00 a.m. Moscow time (0300 GMT) Saturday at the
earliest, Interfax said.
Britain will airlift a Scorpio underwater rescue
vehicle, capable of cutting iron covering or cables, Anton Atrashkin, spokesman
for the British Embassy in Moscow, told Interfax.
"The equipment is being loaded onto a C-17 aircraft,
which will soon leave Prestwick airport outside Glasgow for
Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, where it is expected to arrive in about 11 hours
time," Atrashkin said. Enditem
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| A computer-made picture released
by a Russian TV station in 2000 shows an AS-28 mini-sub working
underwater. (Photo: Xinhua/AFP) |
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| A filephoto taken in Aug., 2000
shows that an AS-28 mini-sub was about to go underwater to rescue the
nuclear sub Kursk. (Photo: Xinhua/AFP) |
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| A filephoto taken in Aug., 2000
shows an AS-28 mini-sub (L), which is of the same model with the stranded
Russian sub. (Xinhua/AFP) | |