Perilous Times and Climate Change
Over 70 drown in single day in Russian heatwave: official
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) July 20, 2010
Seventy-one people drowned in Russia in a single day, officials said
Tuesday, as many sought relief from a prolonged heatwave by jumping
into lakes and rivers.
The Russian emergency ministry registered 85 cases of people getting
into difficulties in water, with 71 people drowning in the last 24
hours alone, it said on its website Tuesday.
"This is a record number of drownings in a 24-hour period out of those
registered this year," a spokeswoman for the ministry, Veronika
Smolskaya, told AFP.
Last year, 2,733 Russians drowned. Most of those who died were drunk
and swimming off beaches without guards or safety equipment, the
ministry said.
This summer the toll looks likely to be much higher, as Russia has seen
a prolonged heatwave with temperatures reaching 35 degrees Celsius in
Moscow on Saturday.
Almost 2,500 people have drowned already this year, 1,244 of them in
June alone. So far in July, the toll stands at 689.
The Interfax news agency said that in recent weeks Mondays had proved
by far the most lethal day of the week for swimming in Russia this
summer, with 52 also killed on Monday, July 12.
On Friday, a 25-year-old woman was killed while swimming in a reservoir
in the Moscow region when a motor boat ploughed into a swimming area
and caught her in its propellers, before speeding off without stopping.