Hundreds of fishermen have been rescued from ice-floes which began to drift after breaking away from the shore in the Russian Far East. Boats and helicopters were used to reach the stranded anglers off Sakhalin island in the Sea of Okhotsk.
Dozens had earlier refused to be rescued without their equipment and catches, officials said. The anglers had been fishing through holes drilled in the ice, a traditional winter pursuit for many Russians.
About a third of Sakhalin is estimated to live off fishing, often carried out in perilous conditions.
Reports say the ice supporting the anglers - said to include women and children - broke free in a number of places in Mordvinov bay, on the south-east coast of Sakhalin. Pushed by strong winds, it began drifting out to sea.
Operations mounted by the Emergencies Ministry rescued all 442 people who were adrift, although about 70 had initially refused to leave without their gear.
One ministry official was quoted by Interfax news agency as saying many of those rescued were in a state of "heavy alcoholic intoxication".
No-one was hurt, reports say
2 comments:
ha..who says there's no global warming...???
hell, I'd be drunk too if i had to live there..
I thought it wasn't too clever digging holes in an ice flow .... sorta like a cartoon character sawing the bough he's sitting on !
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