Perilous Times
Killer icicles terrorize Russians
Falling icicles and ice blocks have killed five people and injured 147
in St Petersburg following Russia's coldest winter in 30 years.
Published: 11:12AM GMT 24 Mar 2010
The Telegraph UK
"Every day, I go out into the street as if I was entering a war zone,"
complained resident Boris Ilinsky, 28.
"I've got to keep my eyes on the ground to avoid slipping and I'm also
looking up to avoid falling lumps of ice," he added.
The high toll has prompted residents and relatives of victims to demand
action against those responsible for what they believe to be careless
clearing of ice from rooftops.
Milana Kashtanova, 21, is the latest victim, and has been in a coma
since February, when she was hit by the ice which was being cleared
from a rooftop.
"Milana was just walking past a building in the city centre... There
was no warning tape, nothing to alert people that people were working
on the roof," said Miss Kashtanova's boyfriend, Irinei Kalachev.
But municipal authorities argued that the accident was her own fault,
saying she ignored warning shouts from street cleaners because she was
wearing headphones and listening to music, Mr Kalachev said.
Her outraged family has appealed to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev,
demanding that he punish the city officials responsible.
The city hall, however, says that accidents are inevitable given the
scale of the ice-clearing after such a severe winter.
"The snow falls this winter have been unprecedented, a kind of natural
disaster. Unfortunately, there are victims," Yury Osipov, head of Saint
Petersburg's housing committee, told AFP.
"There are 13,500 roofs in Saint Petersburg. With the current record
snowfalls, the roofs should be cleared weekly to prevent blocks of ice.
That's impossible, not least because it would paralyse traffic in the
city."
The tragedy of Milana Kashtanova's accident is not uncommon.
Thousands of street cleaners take to the rooftops of Russia's cities
during the spring thaw, sweeping masses of snow and sharp-edged blocks
of ice onto the pavements.
That means that during Russia's springtime thaw, residents are forced
to run the gauntlet of snapping icicles and blocks of ice falling
unexpectedly from roofs, as well as the ground-level hazards of
slippery slush and puddles.
This week alone, a 55-year-old woman in central Moscow and a pensioner
in the southwestern city of Voronezh were also killed by falling
icicles, local investigators said.
Residents in Saint Petersburg complain that local authorities do not
take proper precautions to protect the public.
"I have seen city employees clearing roofs without putting in place any
safeguards to protect passersby," said city resident Marina Romanova.
In the face of mounting criticism, however, Valentina Matviyenko, the
city's governor, has yielded to the pressure and threatened to fire
dozens of city officials.