Russian explorers dived deep below the North Pole in a
submersible yesterday and planted their national flag on the seabed
to stake a symbolic claim to the energy riches of the Arctic.
A mechanical arm dropped a specially made, rust-proof titanium
flag painted with the Russian tricolor onto the Arctic seabed at a
depth of 4,261 meters.
"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, also 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.
But 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 km 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 newsreader
for Russia's state news channel Vesti-24, which made the expedition
their top news story.
Russian media have said the move could raise tension with the
United States in a battle for Arctic gas.
(China Daily via agencies August 3, 2007)