The gates of Hell has open up in Moscow - has Many Express Fear Over unpleasant smell
Report in Moscow (Chat212 FM) - Predictably, The gateway to Hell in Moscow had begin, with many joking that the gates of Hell opened up in the city of some 12 million.
Report in Moscow (Chat212 FM) - Predictably, The gateway to Hell in Moscow had begin, with many joking that the gates of Hell opened up in the city of some 12 million.
A
foul odour enveloped the Russian capital throughout the day on Monday,
with concerned Muscovites flooding authorities with complaints and
officials scrambling to locate the source of the stench.
Residents
of Moscow began complaining early Monday of the "unpleasant smell of
sulphur, hydrogen sulfide and oil products in the air,"
MosEcoMonitoring, an environment watchdog in Moscow, said in a
statement.
The concentration of hydrogen sulfide in the
air briefly exceeded the norm while the sulphur dioxide was within
limits, the watchdog said.
Authorities warned Russians against panic.
"The smell of hydrogen sulfide is not dangerous," the emergencies ministry spokesman told AFP.
Moscow's chief toxicologist Yury Ostapenko also sought to allay fears.
"The appearance of smell is more unpleasant than dangerous," he said, speaking on radio.
"This is unpleasant but it makes no sense to worry that we are going to get sick right now."
By
Monday evening the stench eased but the mystery deepened when the
authorities said a local oil refinery was to blame, but its owner denied
any problems.
The emergencies ministry pointed the
finger at faulty air filters at a refinery in southeastern Moscow, but
Gazprom Neft, the oil arm of state gas giant Gazprom, which controls the
refinery, denied the claim.
"The refinery is working
in an ordinary mode," Gazprom Neft said in a statement on Monday
evening, adding that its own labs did not register any spike in the
concentration of hydrogen sulfide.
"Did the gates of
Hell open up in Moscow?" one Russian, writing under the nickname Yurii
Eagle, asked on Twitter. "What is this smell?"
"Let me
remind you that 'Interstellar' also begins with the smell of smoke, dust
and all of that," said another Twitter user, referring to a new science
fiction film depicting an apocalyptic future on Earth.
In 2010, amid the worst heatwave in its history, noxious smoke enveloped Moscow as fires burned outside the Russian capital.
The
smoke crept into apartments, offices, stores and even underground into
the Moscow metro, forcing Russians to wear surgical masks or flee the
debilitating combination of smog and high temperatures.