
#6
Russia: Arctic Cold Leaves Tens Of Thousands Without
Heat
By Gregory Feifer
Tens of thousands of people across Russia have been left without central
heating as temperatures in some regions drop to minus 40 degrees Celsius and
even lower. The cold is also taking lives -- mostly those of homeless people who
freeze to death outside. Top officials are addressing Russia's latest crisis,
but with no let-up in sight for the long-running cold snap, the country looks
set to continue suffering from freezing temperatures for the foreseeable future.
Moscow, 9 January 2003 (RFE/RL) -- A wave of Siberian cold has left over
25,000 people across Russia without heat as aging infrastructure breaks down and
forecasters predict little let-up in the weather pattern, which has already
lasted well over a month.
Pushed down over the North Pole by unusually warm, El Nino-driven weather
across the globe in the United States, freezing Arctic air has dropped December
and January temperatures in Russia to their lowest level in over 15 years,
meteorologists say.
Russian Meteorological Center Deputy Director Gennadii Yeliseev yesterday
listed some of the low points. "On 6 and 7 January, it was minus 48 degrees
Celsius in the Murmansk region -- that is very cold. It was minus 42 in the
region of Arkhangelsk, minus 33 in the Leningrad region -- very low
temperatures."
Freezing temperatures and large snowfalls have overburdened
hot-water-pipeline heating systems in 13 regions, chiefly in the northwest of
the country, leaving 25,440 people without heat in hundreds of buildings, the
Emergency Situations Ministry said today.
Russian television showed the interior walls of buildings coated with ice and
residents struggling to stay warm by bundling up and huddling around electric
heaters. Over 100 buildings have been left without heat in the Leningrad region.
Ships were left stranded in 80-centimeter-thick ice in the port of St.
Petersburg on the Gulf of Finland. A heating pipe burst in the town of Valdai in
the Novgorod region northwest of Moscow, leaving 3,100 residents and a local
hospital without heat.
Temperatures in Moscow reached minus 31 degrees Celsius overnight on 7
January, killing six people who froze to death outside. A total of 272 people
have died of exposure in the capital so far this year, Interfax reported. Some
400 people die on Moscow streets from the cold each year, many while drunk. This
year the numbers might rise higher because of the unusually intense cold.
On the Far East Sakhalin peninsula, a three-day snowstorm killed six,
including an 11-year-old boy found buried under snow. Rescue workers saved 39
people from snowdrifts.
President Vladimir Putin met Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov yesterday to
discuss heat and electricity cuts, ITAR-TASS reported. The Emergency Situations
Ministry is mobilizing a workforce of around 1,000 to repair burst pipes and
broken heating systems. Military troops have been ordered to help with repairs.
The cold has dominated the national news. "Russia is freezing, but no
bureaucrats have suffered," "Izvestiya" newspaper writes in a
headline.
People interviewed on the streets of Moscow -- which itself has not suffered
heating shortages -- mostly blamed regional authorities for the heating
problems. One man reflected general opinion: "In the summer, when it was
necessary to deal with all this, [the authorities] were doing other things --
summer relaxation -- and left people without heat."
Meanwhile, prosecutors in the Far East city of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatka have
opened a criminal case against its administration, accused of squandering budget
money allocated for fuel supplies, Interfax reported.
The liberal Yabloko Party today said the government was responsible for the
crisis for allowing housing and utilities reform to be put off. Proponents of
reform -- which the Duma put on hold last year -- have long been pushing for
unpopular change to open the Soviet-era sectors to market forces. Utilities
remain heavily subsidized by the state, charge negligible rates from industry
and the population, and suffer from lack of investment and decay.
In statements reported by Interfax, Yabloko deputy chief Sergei Mitrokhin
said, "This crisis situation is a direct consequence of the government's
housing and utilities policies, which [force the population] to bow to the
dictates of utilities monopolists."
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