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Russian dam families want truth as hopes fade
Wed Aug 19, 2009 10:15am EDT
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By Ilya Naymushin
CHERYOMUSHKI, Russia (Reuters) - Relatives of missing workers on Wednesday demanded the authorities tell the truth about an accident at Russia's largest hydro-power plant as hopes faded of finding 62 missing people alive.
A sudden surge of water burst through aging turbines at the Soviet-era at the Sayano-Shushenskaya plant in Siberia on Monday, flooding a 100-meter (328 ft) long engine hall and four other floors below it. So far, 13 bodies have been found.
"They do not care what has happened to our men," shouted one of 100 assembled relatives of the dead and missing after a meeting with Viktor Zimin, the head of the local government. "We want to know the truth."
"The state and the owners just cared about profit," another relative said. Flags flew at half mast as the task of burying the dead began.
Several major accidents in the mining and power sectors have highlighted Russia's creaking Soviet-era infrastructure which engineers say has been starved of investment for decades.
The accident has shaved $1.5 billion off the market value of the plant's owner RusHydro and its Moscow-listed shares opened down 10 percent on Wednesday after the end of a two-day trading suspension requested by management.
The local government of the Khakasia Republic said the search was continuing, though rescuers said privately that there was little hope of finding many more people alive.
"Divers are working in very difficult conditions -- the water is muddy and mixed with machine oil but the entire turbine room is being searched very carefully... No-one intends to end the search operation," the local government said in a statement.
Divers found one more body on Wednesday in the engine room, taking the death toll to 13 with 15 others injured, according to a spokesman for the local emergencies ministry. He said another 61 to 62 people remained unaccounted for.
OIL SLICK
United Company RUSAL, the world's largest aluminum producer, operates two smelters within 50 km (30 miles) of the dam and said production losses as a result of the accident could potentially equal 11 percent or more of last year's output.
The cause of the water surge -- labeled a "hydro-shock" by officials -- which flooded the engine room and damaged three of the huge turbines is still unclear.
Russian officials say the 1,074-meter (3523 ft) wide concrete structure of the dam has not been damaged and that there is no risk of flooding.
But on Wednesday a 25-km (15 mile) long oil slick was snaking its way down the Yenisei river south of the dam.
A spokesman for Russia's Natural Resources Ministry said the slick contained at least 45 tons of fuel oil but declined to say how the oil had got there. He said that the eco-systems of the world's fifth-largest river were "totally unaffected." Continued...
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