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Forest fires destroy Moscow military base
Moscow (AFP) Aug 3, 2010 Forest fires plaguing Russia destroyed a naval logistics base outside Moscow, torching aeronautical equipment and vehicles, investigators said Tuesday. The fire at the base in Kolomna, southeast of the capital, destroyed the staff headquarters, financial department, 13 warehouses containing aeronautical equipment and 17 storage areas containing vehicles, a statement from the committee investigating the blaze said. "The base was affected by forest fires on July 29 and the blaze was contained on July 30 without any casualties," said the statement. An investigation was under away to establish the extent of the damage and the exact circumstances leading to the blaze, the statement said. The fire was first reported by tabloid news website Life News, which cited sources saying the base was entirely destroyed with 200 planes torched and losses estimated at 20 billion rubles (500 million euros). Strategic sites have not been spared from the advance of the fires, which have killed at least 40 people amid an unprecedented heatwave. Hundreds of emergency workers are being sent to the city of Sarov, the location of Russia's main nuclear research facility, to ensure the top-secret site is not damaged by fires on the city's outskirts.
earlier related report The fires have destroyed residential houses, consumed farmland, left 2,000 people homeless and killed at least 40 people in several regions around Moscow, causing Russian President Dmitry Medvedev to declare a state of emergency. The Kremlin has dispatched some 200,000 emergency workers and dozens of planes to fight the fires but it's proving an uphill battle due to strong winds and the hottest summer since temperature recordings began 130 years ago. Russian authorities reported 529 fires raging Tuesday, covering an area of 425,000 acres, compared with 460 fires Monday. The regions of Nizhny Novgorod, Voronezh and Ryazan have been worst hit. The government has sent extra firefighters to protect a major nuclear facility at Sarov, in Nizhny Novgorod, a top secret site during the Cold War, the BBC reports. At Sarov, founded after World War II, the Russian nuclear weapons program was developed. A spokesman for Russia's nuclear energy agency Rosatom told Russian news agency RIA Novosti that Rosatom head Sergei Kiriyenko has left for Sarov to coordinate the firefighting activities near the nuclear facility. Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin over the weekend stopped his summer vacation to fly into the crisis region, promising locals that their burned-down villages would be rebuilt before the winter. Yet the Kremlin won't be able to replace the crops that have been consumed by the fire: Around one-fifth of Russia's expected grain harvest has been destroyed, causing wheat prices on international markets to climb to a 22-month highs. In Moscow, people were encouraged to wear gauze masks because of the smoke that has clouded the capital for days. Officials don't expect a quick end to the fires. The heat wave, ongoing since early July, is expected to bring strong winds and temperatures of more than 100 degrees Fahrenheit to Russia this week. "The situation is still very difficult; the heat is not abating; the forecasts are not looking good, so the threat of new fires is not decreasing," Medvedev wrote in his blog, RIA Novosti reports. In a bid to improve the reaction to future fires, the president Tuesday ordered Emergency Minister Sergei Shoigu to draw up a special program to boost the firefighting service, including increasing the number of vehicles and airplanes to move firefighters around. "Separate funding will need to be set aside for that," he was quoted as saying by RIA Novosti.
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Russia forest fires spread in record heatwave Moscow (AFP) Aug 1, 2010 Russian firefighters Sunday battled the flames of spreading forest fires that have already killed 30 people and devastated villages, but officials claimed some success in controlling the disaster. The emergency situations ministry said it deployed hundreds of thousands of workers to fight the blazes, along with 2,000 members of the armed forces, as the situation worsened early Sunday due to ... read more |
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