MEDVEDEV SACKS OFFICERS OVER RUSSIA FIRE FAILURES 4 August, 2010 BBC's Richard Galpin: “Twelve houses here have been completely destroyed”.
Russia's President Dmitry Medvedev has sacked several top military officials for failing
to stop wildfires from destroying a naval base outside Moscow.
He made the announcement after halting his summer holiday to return to Moscow for
emergency talks on the wildfires.
Seven regions are under a state of emergency as the fires, which have killed
48 people, continue to rage.
To the east of the capital firefighters are battling blazes near a major nuclear research
facility in Sarov.
As a precaution, all nuclear materials have been removed from the site, which is about
400 km (250 miles) to the east of Moscow.
“All explosive and radioactive materials have been taken away”, Sergei Kiriyenko, head
of Russia's nuclear agency, said after attending the emergency meeting of the national
security council chaired by Mr. Medvedev.
Mr. Kiriyenko said there was no risk of a nuclear disaster, and that the primary concern
was the threat to expensive equipment and the suspension of important work.
“I can guarantee that even in an extreme situation with squalling winds there is no
danger to nuclear security, no threat of radiation, explosions, or environmental
consequences”, he said.
Public reprimand Having returned to Moscow from his traditional summer break in the Black Sea resort of
Sochi, Mr. Medvedev announced the military sackings during a televised appearance at the
Kremlin.
Dmitry Medvedev warned that future incidents would also result in sackings
Last Thursday, flames tore through the naval logistics base in Kolomna, 100 km south-
east of Moscow, destroying office buildings and warehouses and equipment.
Mr. Medvedev said commanders of the base were absent when the fire occurred and
that it was “unclear where they were”.
As a result, Mr. Medvedev formally reprimanded the head of the Russian navy, Admiral
Vladimir Vysotsky, and his deputy Alexander Tatarinov, accusing them of a lack of
“professional responsibility” over how the fire was handled.
He also said he had ordered the sacking of a swathe of officers including the head of
the Russian navy's logistics division, Sergei Sergeyev, and Nikolai Kuklev, the head of the
navy's aviation arm.
Mr. Medvedev said many other military sites across Russia were also threatened by the
wildfires, and warned that if they were not properly protected by the military there would be
more sackings.
“If something similar happens in other places and departments, I will act in the same
way, without any pity”, Mr. Medvedev said.
Thousands of people are said to have lost their homes in 14 regions of Russia over the
past few days.
About a fifth of Russia's grain crop has also been destroyed.
On Wednesday morning, 520 fires were still burning over an area of 188,525 ha
(465,000 acres), Russia's emergency ministry said.
In a 24-hour period, 403 new fires had been recorded and 293 had been extinguished,
the ministry added.
Many children are being evacuated from summer camps threatened by fires.
— 49 —
There is expected to be no let up in the heatwave, which has seen record average
temperatures, in the next few days, with the Moscow area predicted to hit about 38
º
C
(100
º
F) this week.
Elena Lezina, an expert at the Moscow state agency that monitors air quality, said
pollution in the capital had surged four to 10 times above safe levels on Wednesday morning.