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Russia plants flag on Arctic floor

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  • Russia plants flag on Arctic floor

    Russia plants flag on Arctic floor

    Reuters
    August 2, 2007

    MOSCOW, Russia (Reuters) -- Russian explorers have dived deep below the
    North Pole in a submersible and planted their national flag on the
    seabed to stake a symbolic claim to the energy riches of the Arctic.

    A mechanical arm on Thursday dropped a specially made, rust-proof
    titanium flag painted with the Russian tricolor on to the Arctic seabed
    at a depth of 4,261 meters (13,980 feet).

    "It was so lovely down there," Itar-Tass news agency quoted expedition
    leader Artur Chilingarov as saying as he emerged from one of two
    submersibles that made the dive.

    "If a hundred or a thousand years from now someone goes down to where we
    were, they will see the Russian flag," said Chilingarov, 67, a top
    pro-Kremlin member of parliament.

    Russia wants to extend right up to the North Pole the territory it
    controls in the Arctic, believed to hold vast reserves of untapped oil
    and natural gas, which is expected to become more accessible as climate
    change melts the ice.

    President Vladimir Putin congratulated the expedition by telephone on
    "the outstanding scientific project," local agencies reported.

    Boris Gryzlov, who heads the State Duma lower chamber of parliament and
    the pro-Kremlin United Russia party, hailed the expedition as "a new
    stage of developing Russia's polar riches."

    "This is fully in line with Russia's strategic interests," local media
    quoted him as saying. "I am proud our country remains the leader in
    conquering the Arctic. I am proud United Russia members took part in
    this unprecedented mission."

    Major Russian channels aired a message from the Russian crew manning the
    International Space Station who said "this achievement must inspire the
    younger generation".

    Earlier on Thursday Canada mocked Russia's ambitions and said the
    expedition was nothing more than a show.

    "This isn't the 15th century. You can't go around the world and just
    plant flags and say 'We're claiming this territory'," Canadian Foreign
    Minister Peter MacKay told CTV television.

    Under international law, the five states with territory inside the
    Arctic Circle -- Canada, Norway, Russia, the United States and Denmark
    via its control of Greenland -- have a 320-kilometer (200-mile) economic
    zone around the north of their coastline.

    Russia is claiming a larger slice extending as far as the pole because,
    Moscow says, the Arctic seabed and Siberia are linked by one continental
    shelf.

    "Then Russia can give foundation to its claim to more than a million
    square kilometers of the oceanic shelf," said a news reader for Russia's
    state news channel Vesti-24, which made the expedition its top news story.

    Russian media have said the move could raise tension with the United
    States in a battle for Arctic gas.

    A Tass reporter on board the mission support ship said crew members
    cheered as Chilingarov climbed out of the submersible and was handed a
    pair of slippers.

    "This may sound grandiloquent but for me this is like placing a flag on
    the moon, this is really a massive scientific achievement," Sergei
    Balyasnikov, spokesman for Russia's Arctic and Antarctic Institute, told
    Reuters.

    Russia says the mission is intended to show that the Lomonosov ridge, a
    1,800-kilometer underwater mountain range that extends under the Arctic
    to near the pole, is a geological extension of Russian territory.

    It denied it was a land grab.

    "The aim of this expedition is not to stake Russia's claim but to show
    that our shelf reaches to the North Pole," Foreign Minister Sergei
    Lavrov told reporters in Manila, where he is attending a regional
    security conference.

    The Mir-1 submersible reached the seabed at 1208 Moscow time (0808 GMT)
    and returned to the surface exactly six hours later.

    A second Russian submersible, manned by Swedish businessman Frederik
    Paulsen and Australian adventurer Mike McDowell, reached the seabed 27
    minutes later. It reached a depth of 4,302 meters.

    Soviet and U.S. nuclear submarines have often traveled under the polar
    icecap, but until Thursday none had reached the seabed under the pole.


    http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/europe/08/02 /arctic.sub.reut/index.html?section=cnn_latest
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