Nov 12, 2007, 9:23 GMT
Kiev - Some 2,000 tons of heating oil spilled into the Black Sea from a wrecked tanker as a vicious winter storm slammed into the Crimean peninsula causing an 'ecological disaster,' Russian environmental authorities reported Monday.
Picture made available on 12 November 2007 shows ships struggling in rough water near the Black Sea port of Novorossiysk, Russia, 11 November 2007. Massive waves split a Russian oil tanker in two during a fierce storm on 11 November, spilling at least 560,000 gallons of fuel into a strait leading to the Black Sea. It was the worst environmental disaster in the region in years, and some officials said could take years to clean up. EPA/YURI BEREZNYUK
Four cargo ships sank in Sunday's storm which whipped up 6-metre waves, said the head of the Russian emergency situations, Anatoly Yanchuk. Three sailors were dead and at least 23 were missing, according to Russian television reports.
Four other vessels - two cargo ships and two ocean-going barges - grounded in some of the worst winter weather seen in the region in a decade.
Russian hospitals in the region held 27 persons injured in the shipping accidents, three in serious condition, Channel 5 television reported.
The sunk tanker Volgoneft-139 had leaked 2,000 tons of the 4,000 tons of fuel oil it was carrying into the Kerch Strait linking the Black Sea and Sea of Azov. The 13-member crew were rescued.
A few nautical miles away two cargo ships carrying a total 6,000 tons of sulphur were under water near Tuzla Island. Eight sailors from one of the cargo ships were missing.
A fourth sunk cargo ship, carrying steel products, was unlikely to pose a substantial threat to the environment, Korrespondent magazine reported.
Rescue teams found alive two sailors and a cook in the strait's waters early Monday morning. A search effort by Russian and Ukrainian navy and civilian vessels was continuing, aided by clearing skies and calming seas.
Most of the cargo ships had been riding at anchor waiting their turn to move through the strait, when the storm stuck. One of the cargo ships loaded with sulphur sank after being struck by another vessel torn loose from its moorings.
Clean-up crews numbering over 500 men had placed floating spill control fences around the slick, and a clean up of the oil slick was in progress.
Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko urged the government to clean up the spill in the waters between Russia and Ukraine as quickly as possible. Kiev did not classify the spill as a disaster.
The Russian state prosecutor said initial investigations had shown that the Volganeft 139 was not storm-proof and should have stayed in port when the storm was drawing in.
Elsewhere a Russian dry bulk ship carrying agricultural equipment was driven ashore near the Ukrainian port city Sudak, some 300 kilometres from the Kerch Strait.
The crew evacuated the vessel safely, Ukrainian officials said.
A freighter loaded with scrap metal was in sinking condition in a bay near the Ukrainian port Sevastopol. Of the 17-member crew, two were evacuated and 15 were missing.
Two cargo ships, one Georgia-flagged and the other Turkey-flagged, were reportedly driven aground near the Russian port Novorossisk. A failed main engine and broken anchor chain, respectively, were responsible for the mishaps, a Novorossisk official said.
The severe winds and driving snow knocked out power ashore in the port city Sevastopol, paralysing public transport and leaving some buildings in the area without heating.
More than 230 villages and towns in the Crimean region lost power as a result of the storm. Shore regions of the Black Sea peninsula on Monday morning were littered with blown down trees and smashed advertising hoardings, and houses throughout the region suffered roof damage, Korrespondent reported.
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