Russia submerges nuclear submarine to douse blaze

MOSCOW, (Reuters) – Russia tried to submerge a  burning nuclear submarine at a navy shipyard yesterday after  battling for hours with helicopters and tug boats to bring the  raging blaze under control.
There was no radiation leak, authorities said.

Television pictures showed a giant plume of smoke above the  yard in the Murmansk region of northern Russia as over 100  firemen struggled to douse flames which witnesses said rose 10  metres (30 feet) above the stricken vessel.

Emergency workers said efforts to partially sink the  submarine at the dock had failed to fully extinguish the fire. A  defence ministry spokesman quoted by state news agency RIA said  the blaze, which began at 1220 GMT, was under control more than  eight hours later.

Russia said the nuclear reactor had been shut down and all  weapons had been removed from the 167-metre (550 feet)  Yekaterinburg, which launched an intercontinental ballistic  missile from the Barents Sea at a firing range thousands of  miles away in Kamchatka as recently as July.

“Radiation levels are normal,” a spokeswoman for the  emergencies ministry said. “No one was injured.”

After hours of trying to put out the flames, officials  decided to partially submerge the hull of the 18,200-tonne  submarine at the Roslyakovo dock, one of the main dockyards of  Russia’s northern fleet 1,500 km (900 miles) north of Moscow.

Local media reports were vague, but the blaze was believed  to have started when wooden scaffolding caught fire during  welding repairs to the submarine, which had been hoisted into a  dry dock.