'Miracle' Russian survives two months adrift in icy seas on inflatable boat
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A Russian man survived more than two months drifting in icy seas on an inflatable boat in an ordeal that claimed the lives of his brother and teenaged nephew, officials and reports said.
Mikhail Pichugin may have survived because of his portly 100 kilograms (220 pounds) stature, according to his incredulous wife. Media reports said he weighed only 50kg when found on Monday.
The man, his brother, and a 15-year-old set off for Sakhalin island from the far eastern Khabarovsk region on August 9 on an inflatable catamaran, transport prosecutors said.
The boat was discovered at about 10.00 pm on Monday as it floated past a fishing boat in the Sea of Okhotsk, around 1,000 kilometers (670 miles) from its starting point and 66 days after it set off.
A video posted by prosecutors shows a bearded man in a life jacket shouting at the fishermen: "I don't have much strength" but managing to catch a rope.
The survivor was named by the RIA Novosti news agency as Mikhail Pichugin. The bodies of his brother Sergei, 49, and nephew Ilya, 15, were still on the boat.
Rescuers had mounted a helicopter and plane search for the trio a few days after they disappeared, suspecting the boat had been carried by currents towards Kamchatka.
50 kilos lost
Pichugin's wife Yekaterina told RIA Novosti: "It's a kind of miracle". She said the men had taken enough food and water to last only two weeks.
She said her husband's bulk could have saved him, as "he weighed around 100 kilograms". Russian television reported he lost 50kg.
The fishing boat brought Pichugin to the far eastern city of Magadan, where he was taken off in a stretcher, apparently conscious.
His condition is "more or less stable", the chief doctor of the regional hospital, Yury Lednev, told RIA Novosti, saying he was likely to have suffered from hypothermia.
The fishing boat also brought back the bodies and the inflatable boat, which was being examined by investigators.
Criminal probe launched
Transport investigators have launched a probe into possible breaches of safety rules, raising the prospect that Pichugin could face a criminal charge and risk a prison sentence of up to seven years.
The Baza Telegram channel, which is seen as close to law enforcement, cited sources as saying the group had around 20 litres of water and collected rain water and ate dried noodles and peas.
The channel reported that Pichugin told the fishermen his nephew died in early September after which the brothers spent about three weeks together on the boat.
They began to get bedsores from sitting so long and his brother tried to wash himself and fell in the icy water. Pichugin retrieved him but he died soon after, Baza reported.
Pichugin then tied his brother and nephew's bodies to the boat to prevent them falling into the choppy waves. He hung their life jackets on the side of the boat in a bid to attract attention.
The brothers were from Ulan-Ude in Siberia but Mikhail Pichugin was working on Sakhalin as a driver.
He had invited his brother and nephew to visit and they planned a sea trip to see whales, Komsomolskaya Pravda tabloid reported, citing relatives.
An expert questioned by RIA Novosti recalled that in 1960, four Soviet soldiers survived 49 days adrift on a small boat in the Pacific Ocean that was found by the US aircraft carrier Keersarge.