Russian Baby Rescued After Nearly 36 Hours in Frozen Rubble

MOSCOW (AP) —
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Russian Emergency Situations Ministry employees carry the baby found in the rubble of the collapsed apartment building. (Russian Ministry for Emergency Situations photo via AP)

Laboring through sub-freezing temperatures, Russian rescue workers were digging into a sprawling heap of jagged rubble from a collapsed apartment building when one heard the faintest sound.

It was the sound of life.

On Tuesday, to everyone’s delight and surprise, they pulled a baby boy out of the rubble alive, nearly 36 hours after the disaster that blew apart his home.

The building collapse in the Russian city of Magnitogorsk before dawn Monday has killed at least nine people so far, and more than 30 people who lived in the building have still not been accounted for.

The boy, an 11-month-old named Ivan Fokin, was in extremely serious condition, officials said, with fractures, a head injury and suffering from hypothermia after his ordeal in temperatures around minus-4 degrees Fahrenheit.

He was being flown to Moscow late Tuesday in a desperate attempt to save his life.

Although Ivan’s prospects for survival appeared dire, his father Yevgeny said his being found was a “miracle,” according to the RT satellite TV channel.

The father was at work when his wife phoned to say the building had collapsed. She escaped the rubble with a 3-year-old son, Russian news reports said.

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Emergency Situations employees working at the scene the building collapse, Monday. (AP Photo/Maxim Shmakov)

Rescue worker Pyotr Gritsenko said on Russian TV that the baby’s discovery came after one of the crew heard faint cries.

“They stopped all the equipment. He began to cry louder,” but the crew couldn’t find him, he said. A search dog was brought in and confirmed that someone was under the rubble, focusing the rescue effort.

“The child was saved because it was in a crib and wrapped warmly,” regional governor Boris Dubrovsky was quoted as saying by the Interfax news agency.

The rescue operation, aided by powerful heaters and lights, was continuing overnight into Wednesday in the city about 870 miles southeast of Moscow.

Russian President Vladimir Putin visited the accident site on Monday and went to a local hospital, where he spoke to a 13-year old-boy who had head injuries and frostbite after spending an hour under the rubble.

“You will get well soon, you are a fighter,” Putin told the boy, one of five people hospitalized from the building collapse.

Russian officials say the odds of finding anyone else alive in the debris look increasingly slim, given the extreme weather.

In a separate Russian disaster, seven people, including a couple and their three children, died in a house fire in the town of Orsk, 900 miles southeast of Moscow, Interfax reported. The fire early Tuesday is believed to have been caused by an electrical short-circuit, the report said.

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