全日空機ロシアに緊急着陸 油量低下表示、けが人なし
dly1705120022
日本時間12日午後4時50分ごろ、成田発ドイツ・デュッセルドルフ行き全日空209便ボーイング787がロシア・イルクーツク州のブラーツク空港に緊急着陸した。第1エンジンのオイル量が低下したとの表示が出たため。乗客乗員計133人にけがはなかった。
国土交通省によると、表示が出たのは同午後3時25分ごろで、パイロットがエンジンを止めた。
全日空によると、同午前11時ごろ成田空港を出発し、デュッセルドルフ国際空港に同午後11時に到着する予定だった。代替機を現地に送る。
http://www.sankei.com/photo/daily/news/170512/dly1705120022-n1.html
Ilya Yefremov and Pavel Makarov were waiting at the airport terminal. These two young men are activists in Memorial, an organization founded in 1989 with the aim of documenting the crimes of Communism in general and of Stalin in particular. The way from Bratsk airport to Camp Number 43 is not long. You go past the large, smoky aluminum plants, enter the village of Anzeby and you're already at the gulag. It is estimated that about 20 million people were imprisoned in Stalin's camps - about 1,000 of them in this small camp at the edge of the village, of which only ruins remain now.
There is no memorial or monument at Camp 43, only remnants of the huts where hundreds of forced labor prisoners were locked up in inhumane conditions in the Siberian cold. Only the staff toilet building remains standing, near the fence of the camp that has been destroyed and the ruins of the workshop. A cold morning wind arose from the nearby town, spreading clouds of terrible environmental pollution from the aluminum plants as we walked among the ruins looking for a trace of the horror. Jedeikin was imprisoned a few hundred kilometers from here, at the camp at Tayshet and the sights, he says, are similar.
In the nearby village there is no running water and a truck distributes water to barrels at the entrance to the wooden homes, from which the inhabitants draw the water in heavy metal buckets. Most of the houses are rickety, a backdrop for a movie about Russia 50 years ago. Aleksander Solzhenitsyn was also exiled here in 1947-48 and his "A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovitch," in the 1971 Hebrew edition, accompanies us on our journey. Some 250,000 people live in Bratsk, and there is quite a lot of crime since some of its inhabitants are released criminals.
A muddy road leads from the village to the gulag. Russians who incurred displeasure, Jews, the bourgeois, priests, intellectuals and criminals, along with German, Japanese and Korean prisoners of war who were suspected of resisting the regime in their prisoners' camps - all arrived here. A lone youthful shoe is still lying in the mud; Jedeikin says that there were also teenagers in the camps. The entire way between Tayshet and here, about 600 kilometers, was dotted with hundreds of such camps. This is the land of the gulag.
http://www.haaretz.com/ay-155-returns-to-the-gulag-1.200246
また同じ面子なわけですな。(爆wwwwwwwwwww
0 件のコメント:
コメントを投稿