TERRA.WIRE
Russian researchers nearly swallowed up by Arctic ice awaiting rescue
MOSCOW (AFP) Mar 05, 2004
Researchers on a Russian floating station off the cracking Arctic ice floes that nearly swallowed up the facility were waiting to be evacuated Friday, as helicopters prepared to snatch them to safety.

The crew's morale was good and the situation under control, station chief Vladimir Koshelyev told NTV television late Thursday.

"We have sleeping spaces, we have heat going, we can live here, we have warm food ready. All researchers are in a good mood, everything is all right," the ITAR-TASS news agency quoted Koshelyev as saying to NTV.

"We know we can be sure that help is on its way," he added.

Most of the installations of the North Pole-32 research station, Russia's first since the Soviet Union fell apart in 1991, sank overnight Wednesday when the ice below it first cracked and then disintegrated.

None of the 12 researchers posted to the station were hurt and all took shelter in the few structures that did not sink in the icy water, officials said.

"All of a sudden around 5:15 pm (1415 GMT) a huge wall of ice appeared that kept growing and growing," Koshelyev earlier told Rossia television website.

"First they were three meters (yards) high, then five, then seven and finally over 10," he said. "In the course of a half hour they practically swallowed up 90 percent of the station, leaving only two small houses."

The researchers, all experienced polar hands, have taken shelter in the two houses with food and emergency supplies to last about five days, he said.

The researchers alerted border guards to the accident via radio and three helicopters have been prepared to pluck the scientists off the ice.

The choppers were due Friday to fly out to the station, where wind is howling up to 50 kilometers (30 miles ) per hour, said Artur Chilingarov, a deputy speaker of parliament and former Arctic explorer who is coordinating the rescue effort.

"Don't worry ... We'll get you off so you can return to the motherland," Russian television showed him as telling the researchers on the telephone from his State Duma office.

Norway has offered Russia its assistance in evacuating the North Pole-32 crew, a Russian diplomat in Oslo told the ITAR-TASS news agency late Thursday.

Norway's Spitzbergen island is the inhabited land closest to the station, located some 700 kilometers (435 miles) away, ITAR-TASS reported.

The station, set up in April 2003 to study climate change, has travelled some 3,000 kilometers atop the ice floes since then and is currently some 700 kilometers (440 miles) from the North Pole in the Nansen Basin, news reports said.

It was due to complete its work by March 20.

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