The
tourists were ready with cameras around 11 am… then came Chiskhaan...' the brave
swimmer for a dip in an icy pool in Oymyakon, the coldest inhabited settlement
in the world. While some areas of
Siberia are this winter unusually mild, the thermometers in Yakutia -
officially called the Sakha
Republic - have reached
the deep cold for which this region is world famous. Oymyakon is on the Indikirka River,
but it is said to take its name from the Oymyakon River,
the origins of which mean in the local language 'unfrozen patch of water, place
where fish spend the winter'. It was
here on 6 February 1933 that a temperature of minus 67.7C was recorded at the
local weather station, the lowest ever for any permanently inhabited location
on Earth.
~ while this
report is a few months old, the latest one is about packed minibus being filled with boiling water after 'geyser'
bursts through Siberian street….
It is stated that 13 people suffered serious burns in freak accident caused by
a sudden burst in hot water pipeline. The
report adds that there were scenes of panic as people pawed at the windows
desperate to escape the bus. The boiling water shot out a manhole rising like a
fountain to a height of a five storey building. The bus driver tried to go
through the obstacle but the road had caved in, and the vehicle drove into the
steam-covered crevice, becoming stuck, and turning into an oven on wheels.
The driver jumped
through the smashed windscreen to flee but did not open the doors for more than
fifteen passengers including five teenagers. The bus got rapidly filled with
scorching water in Vavilova Street
in Krasnoyarsk.
Thirteen people were reportedly rushed
to hospital with heavy skin burns, some in life-threatening condition,' said
regional clinic official Irina Kochetkova. Passenger Svetlana Bochaldina, plucked to
safety from the bus, told how she expected to be boiled to death. 'From the
ground was the fountain of hot water, everything was covered with steam,' she
said. 'It was visible from a long way away. But for some reason the driver
drove directly in this steam. Suddenly, this flow of hot water poured into the
bus. 'All this hot water poured over us, people ran to the back door, but it
was locked, we couldn't open it.
The passenger
complained of difficulty in breathing; the water was so hot as she fell straight
into the boiling water. Other people were falling into it, too. The report adds that the driver could face up
to two years jail for traffic regulation violations. ~ even as people were
struggling there wre some standing around with phones and filming everything on their cameras. The press
service of LLC 'Siberian Generating Company' blamed the accident on wear and
tear of the pipe, built in 1976.
We often
have read about ‘bursting and overflowing’ of pipes in a Standard Fire Policy ~
but this one was never imagined.
With regards – S. Sampathkumar
3rd June 2014.
