A gift of life from angels in fatigues

By Li Xiang and Wang Guomin (China Daily)
Updated: 2007-09-26 07:16

The missing tourists had no food on them and the temperature has dipped to minus 10 C, leading to fears for their lives. Desperate, the local authorities appeal for help from the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region government.

On September 10, Xinjiang Military Area receives a rescue order. A helicopter joins the search operation, leaving Urumqi at

11:30 am. Flying over the Tianshan Mountain, captain Zhong Jianwen and co-pilot Xu Zhi have a hard time keeping the helicopter afloat in the harsh conditions.

It takes them hours to reach the Yurungkax River - "dead zone", as the local people call the stretch in the southern part of Hotan. The epithet is well earned as the 560-km river originating in the Kunlun Mountains is lined with bodies of wild animals that fell into the valley.

Flying low and dodging unpredictable air current and the cliffs that dot the riverbanks, the helicopter scans the entire stretch along the river in the valley. The smallest of errors can put the pilots' lives at risk. They return in the afternoon empty-handed.

The next day, a second flight mission fails to find anything, but a breakthrough is made in the afternoon on the third trip. The pilots find three red rubber rafts in the upper reaches.

A Russian plane carrying Russian search and rescue members arrive at Hotan the same day to join the operation. Over the next three days, the Chinese helicopter makes seven trips.

On September 15, four rescuers land where the rafts were found. The bodies of Sergey Chernik, 47, and his son Ivan, 25, are recovered from under the rafts on the riverbank. Two other Chinese helicopters join the search operation the next day. A third body, that of Vladimir Smetannikov, 25, is found about 19 km downstream.

Air search for the other three resume on September 18 afternoon after an interruption caused by a sandstorm. On September 21, rescuers find the first survivor, Alexander Zverev, 25, on the banks of the upper reaches.

Dazed, stubbled and emaciated, Zverev is still wearing his white canoeing helmet and a yellow-and-blue waterproof jacket. Hours later, another survivor, 28-year-old Andrei Pautov, is found.

There's still no news about the sixth missing tourist, Dmitry Tishchenko.

With most of his fellow travelers dead, one can understand why Zverev says: "Who I want to thank is not God but the great Chinese people and the great People's Liberation Army."

 

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