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Security guard buried alive after 85ft sinkhole opens up in Russian Arctic

Security guard buried alive after 85ft sinkhole opens up in Russian Arctic

Daily Mirror15-07-2025
Security guard Aruzat Lukyanenko, 59, is missing presumed dead after a giant 85ft sinkhole opened up beneath her while at work - her family said she was supposed to have the day off
A female security guard has been 'buried alive' after a 85ft sinkhole suddenly opened up beneath her.

Aruzat Lukyanenko, 59, vanished two and a half weeks ago while working inside a small metal booth on a mining site in the Russian Arctic. Rescuers, who have been unable to dig deep enough to find her, have now called off the efforts at a depth of almost 70ft. It comes amid fears the heavy digging equipment could trigger a deadly new collapse at the copper and nickel ore mine. The sinkhole is estimated to be at least 85ft deep, enough to fit a nine-storey tower - but may be even deeper.


The reason for the collapse is said to be thawing in the frozen permafrost soil, reportedly caused by climate warming. The missing woman's niece Sabina Suendikova said: 'It's scary to think that we will never find our aunt.'
'The question is how the employer allowed her [to be in a booth here] knowing the risks and dangers…without taking any measures to prevent them.'
There had been previous sinkhole collapses in the area, she said. Ms Lukyanenko's role as a security guard was to warn people not to venture onto ground that might sink.

'We have been searching for our aunt for 17 days,' her niece said. 'Today we were told that the search will be stopped until Thursday, because there is no [suitable] equipment.'
Another niece, Radima, said: 'She wasn't supposed to work that day at all — she had a day off. She was asked to replace a colleague, and she agreed.'

But on the phone before the ground collapse she 'seemed to have a premonition of trouble', said her relative. The regional prosecutor's office said: 'The booth was standing on the ground.
'At some point, this whole area of ground together with the booth fell at least 25 metres. There was no void [below the surface]. It probably all happened because of the thawing of the soil, that is, the permafrost melted.'
It's not the first tragedy involving sinkholes in Russia, and in 2019, two men boiled to death after their vehicle fell into a sinkhole filled with boiling water. The incident unfolded in the city of Penza, located 340 miles south of Moscow.
After the water supply was halted to the area, emergency services were able to retrieve the victims' bodies. The local Ministry of Emergencies said the car "fell as a result of the ground collapsing."
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Security guard buried alive after 85ft sinkhole opens up in Russian Arctic
Security guard buried alive after 85ft sinkhole opens up in Russian Arctic

Daily Mirror

time15-07-2025

  • Daily Mirror

Security guard buried alive after 85ft sinkhole opens up in Russian Arctic

Security guard Aruzat Lukyanenko, 59, is missing presumed dead after a giant 85ft sinkhole opened up beneath her while at work - her family said she was supposed to have the day off A female security guard has been 'buried alive' after a 85ft sinkhole suddenly opened up beneath her. ‌ Aruzat Lukyanenko, 59, vanished two and a half weeks ago while working inside a small metal booth on a mining site in the Russian Arctic. Rescuers, who have been unable to dig deep enough to find her, have now called off the efforts at a depth of almost 70ft. It comes amid fears the heavy digging equipment could trigger a deadly new collapse at the copper and nickel ore mine. The sinkhole is estimated to be at least 85ft deep, enough to fit a nine-storey tower - but may be even deeper. ‌ ‌ The reason for the collapse is said to be thawing in the frozen permafrost soil, reportedly caused by climate warming. The missing woman's niece Sabina Suendikova said: 'It's scary to think that we will never find our aunt.' 'The question is how the employer allowed her [to be in a booth here] knowing the risks and dangers…without taking any measures to prevent them.' There had been previous sinkhole collapses in the area, she said. Ms Lukyanenko's role as a security guard was to warn people not to venture onto ground that might sink. ‌ 'We have been searching for our aunt for 17 days,' her niece said. 'Today we were told that the search will be stopped until Thursday, because there is no [suitable] equipment.' Another niece, Radima, said: 'She wasn't supposed to work that day at all — she had a day off. She was asked to replace a colleague, and she agreed.' ‌ But on the phone before the ground collapse she 'seemed to have a premonition of trouble', said her relative. The regional prosecutor's office said: 'The booth was standing on the ground. 'At some point, this whole area of ground together with the booth fell at least 25 metres. There was no void [below the surface]. It probably all happened because of the thawing of the soil, that is, the permafrost melted.' It's not the first tragedy involving sinkholes in Russia, and in 2019, two men boiled to death after their vehicle fell into a sinkhole filled with boiling water. The incident unfolded in the city of Penza, located 340 miles south of Moscow. After the water supply was halted to the area, emergency services were able to retrieve the victims' bodies. The local Ministry of Emergencies said the car "fell as a result of the ground collapsing."

How Putin will respond to 'Russia's Pearl Harbour'
How Putin will respond to 'Russia's Pearl Harbour'

New Statesman​

time03-06-2025

  • New Statesman​

How Putin will respond to 'Russia's Pearl Harbour'

Back in February, with Ukraine's overstretched military struggling to hold the line and the Russian onslaught grinding into its fourth year, Donald Trump berated Volodymyr Zelensky in the Oval Office, telling him that he didn't 'have any cards'. The clear implication was that the Ukrainian president should accept he could not win the war and push for a peace deal on any available terms. But in the three months since it has become clear — perhaps even to Trump — that Vladimir Putin is not seriously interested in peace on terms other than Ukraine's capitulation, and that Zelensky had a stronger hand than his US counterpart understood, with an audacious plan to strike deep inside Russia that was more than 18 months in the making. Shortly after midday on 1 June, secret panels concealed in the roofs of lorries parked near four Russian airfields slid back and a fleet of small quadcopter drones took off towards their targets, flying too low and too close to be intercepted by Russian air defences. Ukraine's SBU security service claims that 117 drones took part in the attack, damaging or destroying 41 Russian aircraft, including several of the country's nuclear capable strategic bombers, at bases ranging from Murmansk in the Russian Arctic to Irkutsk in Siberia, around 4,500 kilometres east of the Ukrainian border. (Those figures have yet to be independently verified but satellite imagery shows clear indications of damage.) Codenamed 'Operation Spider's Web,' the attack is said to have been directed by Vasyl Malyuk, the head of the SBU, and personally supervised by Zelensky. Afterwards, the president congratulated Malyuk in a social media post, calling the operation an 'absolutely brilliant result' which would 'undoubtedly be in history books'. Alongside photos of the two men shaking hands and embracing, Zelensky stressed that the operation was conducted 'solely by Ukraine' and that everyone involved had made it safely out of Russia. (The latter claim has been disputed by Moscow, which claims to have detained multiple suspects.) Zelensky said the operation had taken one year, six months, and nine days to bring to fruition and that it was intended 'to make Russia feel the need to end this war'. Later that day two trains also derailed in western Russia, in separate regions bordering Ukraine, killing at least seven people in suspected acts of sabotage. Russia has stepped up its attacks on Ukraine in recent days, launching multiple large-scale drone and missile barrages of Ukrainian cities, including some of the biggest aerial bombardments since the start of the war in 2022, with swarms of drones intended to overwhelm Ukraine's defences. Russian ground forces have also opened up a new front in northern Ukraine and launched a renewed assault in the eastern Donetsk region towards the strategically important city of Pokrovsk as part of what appears to be a summer offensive. 'I don't know what the hell happened to Putin,' Trump, who has long insisted the Russian president wants to end the war, posted online on 26 May. 'He has gone absolutely CRAZY.' Against this backdrop it is no surprise that the latest round of talks between Russia and Ukraine in Istanbul on 2 June broke up after just over an hour with little discernible progress. The two sides agreed to exchange around 1,000 wounded prisoners of war, along with those aged 18 to 25, and to return the remains of 6,000 soldiers respectively. But reports in Russian state media indicated that the Kremlin has not backed down from the maximalist demands it has held out since the start of the war, insisting that in order to halt the fighting, Ukraine must agree to reduce the size of its military, forswear membership of Nato, and withdraw its troops from the four Ukrainian regions Russia claims to have annexed but does not fully control. In other words, the only terms Moscow is prepared to accept amount to Kyiv's de facto surrender. The ongoing talks, such as they are, seem designed more to mollify Trump, with both sides seeking to demonstrate that they are not the obstacle to peace, rather than bringing the war meaningfully closer to an end. In truth, the conflict is escalating — and the latest round of attacks signals a new, more dangerous phase of mutual brinkmanship. It is unlikely that Ukraine's mass drone strikes will persuade Putin that he must now abandon his war aims and seek an expedited peace. On the contrary, in response to what some commentators are calling 'Russia's Pearl Harbour' – a reference to the Japanese attack on the US Pacific Fleet in December 1941 during the Second World War – Putin will surely be even more determined to punish Ukraine's recalcitrance. Russia's day of infamy must be seen to be met with resolve and strength, not defeat. It is ironic that Putin has succeeded in creating a genuine threat to Russian territory where none existed at the start of this war. Through his aggression he has transformed the phantom enemy that he conjured to justify his invasion of Ukraine in 2022 into reality. (Although, of course, that threat would disappear, and the attacks on Russia would stop if he ceased his assault.) He may well now seek to exploit the Ukrainian drone strikes to drum up more domestic support for his war, shoring up his claim that Russia is fighting a new 'great patriotic war' — just as their ancestors did during the Second World War — to defend the motherland. He is unlikely to believe Zelensky's claims that this attack was authored solely by Kyiv, and will present it instead as further evidence of the wider war he insists Russia is fighting against a hostile West. Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe This is not the first time Russia has suffered serious military setbacks since the start of the war – the sinking of the Moskva, the failure of the assault on Kyiv, the attack on the Kerch bridge to Crimea, and the forced withdrawal from Kherson and Kharkiv, to name just a few. But Putin's consistent response has been to regroup and double down, often accompanied by nuclear sabre-rattling intended to unsettle Ukraine's Western allies. The Russian president will likely lean on the same strategy now, playing on Trump's oft-repeated fears that the conflict risks spiralling into 'World War III' in the hope that the US will pressure Kyiv to back down, or Trump will come to view the war as hopelessly intractable and follow through on his threats to walk away. Yet the other consistent feature of this conflict has been Ukraine's repeated capacity to defy expectations. From the very first hours of the Russian invasion, when Western intelligence reports assessed that Kyiv would be overrun within a matter of days, Ukraine has fought back instead, defending itself, as this latest operation exemplifies, with ingenuity against its much bigger, better armed adversary. The resulting tactics — such as the crucial role played by indigenously produced drones — are transforming the nature of modern warfare. Just as Putin is unlikely to be cowed into offering major concessions and suing for peace, so too is Zelensky likely to be further convinced that Ukraine can still win this war, or at least secure a peace deal on acceptable terms, with or without US support. The end of this war appears further away than ever, but it turns out that Ukraine still has cards to play after all. [See also: Putin's endgame] Related

Terrifying moment man runs for his life from rampaging polar bear after his desperate attempt to shoot the beast failed
Terrifying moment man runs for his life from rampaging polar bear after his desperate attempt to shoot the beast failed

Daily Mail​

time29-04-2025

  • Daily Mail​

Terrifying moment man runs for his life from rampaging polar bear after his desperate attempt to shoot the beast failed

Terrifying footage has captured the desperate charge of a man running for his life from a lumbering polar bear on a remote Arctic island. Residents of the tiny village of Pyramiden had been trying to scare off bears after one was spotted sniffing around residents' snowmobiles. But a harrowing clip from the island of Svalbard showed the moment one brazen creature, undeterred even by a volley of gunshots, turned and gave chase. A Russian mining manager was seen bounding through the snow as onlookers shouted out 'No! Go away!' at the nearing bear. The animal, capable of running at speeds of up to 25mph, charged at the man who, in his panic, dropped his rifle as he leapt onto a snowmobile. The bear was seen just feet away from the lucky Russian as the snowmobile came to his dramatic rescue. The alarm at the Pyramiden came as the mining manager was trying to scare away polar bears from the village, which is popular with tourists. At the time, there were about 80 people in the settlement, who were staying at the Tulip Hotel, said a source at Arktikugol, a Russian Arctic coal company operating in the settlement. 'Bears frequently enter Pyramiden because their migration route runs through the area. 'Some bears are aggressive, while others are more timid and skittish.' The manager made a lucky escape as the bear closed in with ease. While bears are not active predators of humans, they will attack if especially hungry or threatened. Only last year, two polar bears killed a worker at a remote Arctic radar station in Canada's Nunavut territory. 'Employees of the trust undergo training and monitor the safety of tourists, among other duties,' the Arktikugol source explained. 'Both the man and the bear are currently fine,' he said of the undated scare in Pyramiden. 'No-one was injured.' Voices were heard in the clip admiring how the production manager had risked his life to scare the bear. 'Very brave guy……Damn, that guy is brave.' Residents of the island had been trying to scare off bears after one was spotted sniffing around residents' snowmobiles There are around 300 polar bears on Svalbard. The same bear had been seen two days earlier 'inspecting snowmobiles'. Eyewitnesses said food had been left in the snowmobiles, which attracted the predator.'

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