Russian submarine fire kills two

A fire on board a Russian nuclear submarine in the Barents Sea killed two crew members but there was no threat of a radiation leak, the navy said yesterday. Russia's navy chief said the submarine was overdue for scheduled repairs - raising fresh...

A fire on board a Russian nuclear submarine in the Barents Sea killed two crew members but there was no threat of a radiation leak, the navy said yesterday.

Russia's navy chief said the submarine was overdue for scheduled repairs - raising fresh concerns about safety standards in the country's ageing submarine fleet.

Submarine safety has been under scrutiny since the Kursk atomic submarine sank in the Barents Sea six years ago, killing all 118 crew members.

The submarine, the St Daniel of Moscow, has been towed back to port. Navy commander-in-chief Admiral Vladimir Masorin said the fire broke out in an electricity control panel, away from the reactor, and was put out by the crew.

The victims, a 28-year-old sailor and a 35-year-old warrant officer, died of smoke inhalation from fighting the fire.

"It seems likely our equipment has let us down again," Admiral Masorin was shown saying on the Rossiya state television. "This boat is 16-years-old and it is overdue for an overhaul."

He added though that running repairs had been carried out and the vessel was in working order. Admiral Masorin said the fire was most likely caused by a short circuit.

The submarine was north of the Rybachiy peninsula near Russia's border with Finland when it caught fire, Interfax news agency quoted navy sources as saying.

It is a Viktor class attack submarine armed with torpedoes but not nuclear weapons, said defence experts. It was not clear whether the St Daniel of Moscow carried any weapons on mission.

It entered service in 1990, making it one of the fleet's more modern submarines. The same submarine had a fire in its torpedo compartment in 1994, said Norwegian environmental group Bellona, which monitors Russia's submarine fleet.

"This is a very serious incident," said Alexander Nikitin, a former Russian navy nuclear engineer who now works as an environmental campaigner.

A tug towed the vessel to Vidyayevo, a submarine base on the Barents Sea some 50 km north of the city of Murmansk.

Interfax quoted a navy source as saying: "The device protecting the nuclear reactor was activated. There is no radioactive contamination threat whatsoever."

Norway's radiation safety authority, which has measuring stations near the area, said it had not registered any radioactivity above normal.

But the fire may have damaged electrical systems vital for controlling the reactor, said Mr Nikitin, who was briefly jailed on treason charges in the 1990s after writing a report on radioactive contamination from Russian submarines.

"All the pumps for cooling the reactor draw their power from the electrical equipment compartment where the fire was," he said.

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