ID :
124624
Thu, 05/27/2010 - 20:12
Auther :
Shortlink :
http://m.oananews.org//node/124624
The shortlink copeid
Russian plane bringing home injured tourists from Turkey.
MOSCOW, May 27 (Itar-Tass) - A Russian Emergency Situations Ministry
plane with tourists injured in a bus crash in Turkey is flying to Moscow.
"The Il-76 carrying 21 injured tourists has flown from the Antalya
airport at 00:01, Moscow time. It will land at Moscow's Domodedovo
airport," an official at the Emergency Situations Ministry told Itar-Tass.
The injured people, including three children, were accommodated in
special medical modules and are receiving the necessary medical assistance.
Fifteen doctors of the all Russian emergency medicine center
"Zashchita" and Emergency Situations Ministry are accompanying the
injured Russian citizens. Their condition is estimated as serious and of
medium severity. A majority of them have multiple fractures of backbone,
head injuries, broken ribs and limbs, numerous cuts, and blunt abdominal
traumas.
Twenty-seven ambulances are on hand in Domodedovo. They will take the
injured to six Moscow hospitals.
According to the Ministry of Public Health and Social Development, six
will be treated at the Priorov TsITO, five at the Burnazyan federal
medical-biological center, the Vishnevsky research institute, the
Sklifasovsky research institute, and children hospital 9 will
hospitalize three each, and another two will receive treatment in Burdenko
neurosurgery institute.
Two Russians stayed in Turkey because doctors warned against their
transportation. Another two Russian persons were discharged after
receiving medical assistance and will return to Russia on their own.
On Tuesday morning, a group of Russian tourists used a Pegas Touristik
tour to the town of Pamukkale. Their bus fell off a bridge from a 15-meter
height into the river not far from the Antalya airport.
Thirteen Russian and two Turkish citizens died as a result. Twenty-six
Russian were hospitalized. There were 41 people in the bus. Of those, 39
were Russians.
According to the Russian Emergency Situations Ministry, there is one
child among the fatalities, an 11-year-old resident of Nizhnevartovsk. His
mother was killed in the crash, too. Among the fatalities are nine women
and four men, all aged 23 to 56. They are residents of Chelyabinsk,
Novosibirsk, Kemerovo, Syktyvkar, Samara, Kazan, Nizhnevartovsk and Ukhta.
-0-myz
plane with tourists injured in a bus crash in Turkey is flying to Moscow.
"The Il-76 carrying 21 injured tourists has flown from the Antalya
airport at 00:01, Moscow time. It will land at Moscow's Domodedovo
airport," an official at the Emergency Situations Ministry told Itar-Tass.
The injured people, including three children, were accommodated in
special medical modules and are receiving the necessary medical assistance.
Fifteen doctors of the all Russian emergency medicine center
"Zashchita" and Emergency Situations Ministry are accompanying the
injured Russian citizens. Their condition is estimated as serious and of
medium severity. A majority of them have multiple fractures of backbone,
head injuries, broken ribs and limbs, numerous cuts, and blunt abdominal
traumas.
Twenty-seven ambulances are on hand in Domodedovo. They will take the
injured to six Moscow hospitals.
According to the Ministry of Public Health and Social Development, six
will be treated at the Priorov TsITO, five at the Burnazyan federal
medical-biological center, the Vishnevsky research institute, the
Sklifasovsky research institute, and children hospital 9 will
hospitalize three each, and another two will receive treatment in Burdenko
neurosurgery institute.
Two Russians stayed in Turkey because doctors warned against their
transportation. Another two Russian persons were discharged after
receiving medical assistance and will return to Russia on their own.
On Tuesday morning, a group of Russian tourists used a Pegas Touristik
tour to the town of Pamukkale. Their bus fell off a bridge from a 15-meter
height into the river not far from the Antalya airport.
Thirteen Russian and two Turkish citizens died as a result. Twenty-six
Russian were hospitalized. There were 41 people in the bus. Of those, 39
were Russians.
According to the Russian Emergency Situations Ministry, there is one
child among the fatalities, an 11-year-old resident of Nizhnevartovsk. His
mother was killed in the crash, too. Among the fatalities are nine women
and four men, all aged 23 to 56. They are residents of Chelyabinsk,
Novosibirsk, Kemerovo, Syktyvkar, Samara, Kazan, Nizhnevartovsk and Ukhta.
-0-myz