The Phnom Penh Post

Fourteen killed in fire on Russian sub

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FOURTEEN Russian seamen have died in a fire on a deep-water research submersibl­e, Russia’s defence ministry said on Tuesday, amid local media reports that the vessel was a secretive nuclearpow­ered mini-submarine.

Russian officials have offered little informatio­n about the vessel or the circumstan­ces of the accident, but the presence of many senior ranking officers on board could suggest it was not on an ordinary assignment.

The defence ministry said the 14 crew were killed on Monday by inhaling poisonous fumes after a fire broke out on a “scientific research deep-sea submersibl­e” studying sea floor terrain in Russia’s territoria­l waters in the far north.

However the Novaya Gazeta newspaper cited sources as saying that the accident took place on an AS-12 nuclear mini-submarine, which is capable of going to extreme depths.

And Nor way’s radiation aut horit y revea led that Russia had i nformed it that there had been a gas explosion onboard the sub – a claim swiftly denied by Moscow.

“There has been a gas explosion, confirmed by the Russian authoritie­s”, said Per Strand, director of the Norwegian Radiation Protection Authority (NRPA).

“We are waiting for informatio­n from the Russian side about whether there was a reactor onboard the submarine,” he said, adding that the NRPA had not noticed an increase in radiation levels in the area.

Russia’s defence ministry however said “there were no notificati­ons sent to the Norwegian side regarding the Russian science research deep water apparatus”.

‘Big loss’

President Vladimir Putin ordered a full investigat­ion into what he deemed a “tragedy” in the country’s far north, the latest in a string of disasters and accidents to hit Russia’s navy.

“It is a big loss for the navy, and for the army as a whole,” Putin said of the accident, which has echoes of the sinking of the Kursk submarine in 2000 that claimed the lives of 118 personnel and shook the first year of his presidency.

“It is not an ordinary vessel, as we know, it’s a scientific-research vessel, its crew is highly profession­al,” Putin said.

He said the v ictims i ncluded seven Captain First Rank officers – the most senior staf f officers in t he Russian nav y – and t wo have been awarded Hero of Russia, a top tit le given out by t he president.

The fire was put out and the vessel returned to a military base in the northern city of Severomors­k which is located on the Kola Peninsula above the Arctic Circle. It is unknown how many were on board the sub.

The Investigat­ive Committee – which reports directly to Putin – said it was conducting a “pre-investigat­ion probe”.

Putin ordered Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu to travel to Severomors­k to direct the probe and report back.

A militar y expert, speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity, rubbished claims that the fire happened during scientific research.

“Usually it’s a cover for different type of work conducted on the seabed” like laying cables, the expert said.

The Novaya Gazeta reported that the fire took place in a compartmen­t of the AS-12 submarine, also known as Losharik – the name of a Soviet-era cartoon charactor, a winsome little toy horse made of balloons.

Litt le is k nown about t he AS-12.

It was launched in 2003 and is designated for research, rescue and special military operations.

Russia has seen a number of such accidents in the post-Soviet period.

In August 2000, the Kursk submarine sank in the Barents Sea with the loss of all 118 aboard.

An inquiry found that a torpedo had exploded, detonating all the others.

Putin, who stayed on holiday for several days after the disaster, was severely criticised for his response.

Moscow also controvers­ially turned down foreign offers of assistance for the rescue effort.

In another accident in 2008, 20 people – three naval officers and 17 civilians – were killed by poison gas after a vessel’s fire-extinguish­ing system was accidental­ly activated during trials in the Sea of Japan.

In 2011, one of Russia’s biggest nuclear submarines caught fire while undergoing repairs in dock in Murmansk region.

Later it was reported the sub was armed with long-range nuclear missiles when it caught fire.

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