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- Xref: sparky misc.activism.progressive:8545 alt.activism:19010 talk.environment:4672 talk.politics.soviet:9010
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!agate!naughty-peahen
- From: Greenpeace via Jym Dyer <jym@mica.berkeley.edu>
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive,alt.activism,talk.environment,talk.politics.soviet
- Subject: NEWS: Deadly Russian Submarine Legacy
- Followup-To: talk.environment,talk.politics.soviet
- Date: 20 Nov 1992 01:08:05 GMT
- Organization: The Naughty Peahen Party Line
- Lines: 53
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Message-ID: <Greenpeace.19Nov1992.1708@naughty-peahen>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: remarque.berkeley.edu
-
- [Greenpeace Press Release from Greenbase -- Redistribute Freely]
-
- RAINBOW WARRIOR CONFRONTS DEADLY RUSSIAN SUBMARINE LEGACY
-
- VANINO, Russian Far East October 27, 1992 (GP) In a protest at
- the presence of ageing decommissioned nuclear-powered submarines
- in this Far East Russian city, Greenpeace activists from the
- Rainbow Warrior hung a banner today next to a huge mural of
- V.I. Lenin which declared: "Nuclear Subs. Nyet."
-
- Four decommissioned nuclear-powered submarines containing eight
- nuclear reactors loaded with nuclear fuel have been sitting idle
- at the nearby Zavety Ilyicha naval base for the past two years.
- Residents fear that if they are not removed soon, they may sink
- at dockside and leak deadly radiation.
-
- Some of the submarines are located just 300 meters from
- apartment buildings in Zavety Ilyicha.
-
- The naval base sits on Postovaya Bay between the towns of Vanino
- and Sovetskaya Gavan. Four first generation nuclear-powered
- submarines arrived at the base in 1980 and were retired in 1990.
-
- In the first ever confrontation with the Soviet Pacific Fleet,
- thousands of residents from surrounding towns took to the
- streets in the summer of 1990 to protest Soviet Navy plans to
- offload nuclear fuel and scrap the submarines in Postovaya Bay.
-
- Following the protest, the Navy abandoned plans to offload
- the fuel, and the Commander of the Pacific Fleet, Admiral
- Gennadi Khvatov, promised to begin removing one submarine
- a year starting in 1991.
-
- But by October 1992, Admiral Khvatov had failed to deliver.
- The submarines still sit at Zavety Ilyicha, and now there are
- reports that more submarines may be moved there.
-
- As the Greenpeace flagship vessel, the Rainbow Warrior, arrived
- in Vanino last Friday, the Russian Navy announced that the
- submarines would finally be removed, one this month and three in
- 1993. But local residents feel the announcement may be another
- empty promise from the Navy timed to coincide with the Rainbow
- Warrior's arrival.
-
- "The people of this area fought the law and won," said Faith
- Doherty, Rainbow Warrior co-ordinator. "But Russian nuclear
- submarines still threaten Russia more than any other country."
-
- Greenpeace's Nuclear Free Seas campaigner Josh Handler said:
- "Russians are confronting the deadly legacy of nuclear-powered
- submarines all along this coast. The Russian and the U.S. navies
- can no longer roam the sea endangering the oceans and people
- with floating Chernobyls and deadly naval nuclear waste."
-