August 13: The shipwreck of the Russian Kursk
There was a north-facing window in the lounge, and everyone was open and ventilated on weekdays, so if I took advantage of Mosin's immobility, wouldn't I climb out of the window...... Thinking of this, I had a plan in mind. Pen? Interesting? Pavilion wWw. biquge。 info At this time, a negotiator outside the door of the lounge began to shout, asking Mosin to quickly disarm and surrender, release the hostages, and everyone can talk slowly about what they want. I wanted to take this as an opportunity to escape, so I shouted at Mosin: "Mosin, you don't know, they have a break room access card, they will rush in at any time, you see, there is a window here, we go out from here, it should ensure your escape!" I thought it was a good idea, but it didn't seem particularly interesting to Mosin, and he began to look down over there, wondering what he was going to do.
I felt that the time was ripe for escape, and while he was still looking down, I immediately ran out of the window, but I ...... This time it didn't work out, when my whole body was out of the window, and my ankle was caught by Mosin!
I've always been very conceited about my strength, and I can be a security guard here because of my strength. I was pushed into the lounge by Mosin just now, it was because he had a gun, and now he threw away the snatch in his hand and tied my ankles with both hands, which was right in my arms, I used all my strength, I tried to kick Mosin to the ground, but the strength shown by this retired old man stunned me: his hands tightened me tighter and tighter, until finally I couldn't bear the pain of being hooped, and screamed, Mosin "naturally" dragged me back to the lounge!
Originally, I was scared that the angry Mosin would kill me, but he just tilted his head to look at me lying on the ground, and did not make any further moves, and then just turned around and stood there looking at the door of the lounge in a daze.
At this time, I felt that Mosin was not too aggressive towards me, so I no longer had the idea of escaping, just like a "spectator", watching the development of the plot, but later those security guards and policemen outside the door of the lounge, in the case of shouting and negotiation failed, chose to attack, first tried to open the door of the lounge with the access card, and after no result, began to shoot in unison.
The moment I jumped out of the window, the police and security broke down the door to the lounge, and it was at this time that Mosin was "mercilessly" shot to death.
This is a hostage-taking process, and it may be misinterpreted as two hostages being taken as a result of the two window crossings. But the most terrifying thing is the description of the hostages: Mosin seems to have changed, and some of them are not like Mosin himself. So is this murdered suspect Mosin?
After the police shot Mosin to death, they confirmed the identity of the deceased, and immediately sampled a sample of the deceased Mosin, which was originally a form, but there was a big problem with this form, and the DNA test result was not Mosin's, but someone else, after verification, the DNA sample was Karen Drumbien, a lawyer from Armenia. The next direction of events made the Estonian police "dumbfounded". When the Estonian police contacted the family of lawyer Karen Drumbien, they suddenly found that lawyer Karen Drumbien had died at around 15:30 p.m. on August 11. And this time coincided with the beginning of the attack on the building of the Estonian Ministry of Defense.
Due to the importance of the matter, the Estonian police requested the assistance of the Armenian police, and after verification, it was verified that lawyer Karen Drumbien did die on the afternoon of August 11, and it was impossible for lawyer Karen Drumbien to go to the Estonian Ministry of Defense building to commit the crime, regardless of time or space. So where else did Mosin go? After Mosin was killed, the police gave Mosin DNA several times, except for the first two DNA results made by lawyer Karen Drum Bairn, and the third DNA result was Mosin's. The medical examiner determined that Mosin had died of a heart attack before he was "killed". And according to speculation: Mosin died of heart disease at 15:30 pm on August 11!
In other words: after 15:30, Mosin's actions are zombie behavior, or as Professor Ashframe puts it, he and Armenian lawyer Karen Drumbien have a paranormal event of "borrowing corpses to return souls". (ENDS)
On August 13, 2000 (August 12, 2000 local time in Russia), the Russian nuclear submarine Kursk exploded and sank while participating in a military exercise in the Barents Sea, killing all 118 people on board, including 107 crew members and 11 senior generals and assistants of the fleet. It became the deadliest submarine accident in Russian history. The cause of this incident is still inconclusive. Before we get to know the incident, let's take a look at what happened:
In August 2000, Russia organized the largest military training since the collapse of the Soviet Union, and the Kursk was among them. The Kursk was tasked with firing drill torpedoes at the nuclear-powered cruiser Peter the Great. On August 12, 2000, at 11:28 local time, at about 7 a.m. Beijing time on August 13, the torpedo was fired, but an explosion occurred on board the Kursk shortly thereafter. The first chemical explosion on board the boat resulted in an explosion equivalent to 100-250 kilograms of TNT, and seismographs measured a tremor on the Richter scale of 2.2. The Kursk sank to a depth of 108 meters, about 135 kilometers from Severmorsk, and its geographical location is 69°40'N, 37°35'E; Allegedly, the submarine did not carry a nuclear warhead during the exercises.
Although Russia had asked the United Kingdom and Norway, two NATO countries, to help rescue the Kursk, all the sailors and officers on board were still dead. Later studies found that most of the people in the boat died within minutes of the explosion, but some survived about three days in the stern. Many countries and non-official institutions have offered to help, but Russia has refused. The last Dutch rescue team salvaged the Kursk. The remains of 118 of the 115 people who died were found and buried in Russia.
So what exactly caused the explosion of the Kursk? It is generally believed that the hydrogen and oxygen fuel of the torpedo exploded, but some people believe that it was a torpedo explosion of the Storm type. It should be noted that in fact, after the torpedo exploded, the damage could have been prevented in the bow, but a wave of air through the air conditioning pipe affected the third and even fourth sections, and the people in the command tower were also impacted, so they could not take measures such as immediate ascent. In addition, the auto-distress buoy also failed and was not released. (To be continued)