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View Full Version : Russia May Derail Briton's Around-the-World Walk


McTucket
04-15-2006, 09:51 AM
Court Orders Deportation After Adventurer Fails to Get Passport Stamped
By Guy Faulconbridge, Reuters

MOSCOW (April 15) - An adventurer's attempt to walk from the tip of South America to his home in Britain hung in the balance on Friday after a court in Russia ordered his deportation for failing to get a stamp in his passport.

Former paratrooper Karl Bushby was detained in the freezing wastes of Russia's Far Eastern Chukotka region on April 1 after the latest leg of his journey took him across the frozen Bering Strait from Alaska.

Anyone deported from Russia is usually barred from returning for five years -- a bitter blow for Bushby, who after seven years of walking is about halfway through his 36,000 mile trek.

The court in the settlement of Lavrentiya fined Bushby and Dimitri Kieffer, an American who helped him cross the treacherous ice bridge, 2,000 rubles ($72) and ordered both to be deported, Bushby's support team in Britain said.

"That is the end as far as we are concerned -- he can't hang around for years on the off-chance that they may let him in again," Keith Bushby, his father, told Reuters by telephone.

"You can fight against ice and swamps and jungles and gorillas and God knows what else, as Karl has done, but for someone to say: 'No we won't give him a (passport) stamp' is disappointing."

Keith Bushby said he hoped Roman Abramovich, the billionaire owner of Britain's Chelsea soccer club -- who also happens to be governor of Chukotka -- would intervene.

Unbroken Trail

Bushby set off from the tip of South America in 1998 and planned to return to Britain -- via Russia -- in 2009. The object of the trip is to follow an unbroken route on foot.

From Chukotka, the only way home is through Russian territory. If this is off limits to him, there is no other way he can reach his destination while sticking to the rules he has set himself.

"You can't just take plane rides around so basically it is the end of the expedition as such," said Bushby's father.

Bushby, 37, has been leading news bulletins on Russian television, where his exploits have been held up as an example of British courage and eccentricity.

But Bushby and Kieffer faced a chilly reception from border guards when, after braving polar bears and treacherous sea ice in the Bering Strait, they turned up in Chukotka.

The men, who speak little Russian, had valid visas but they had failed to get their passports stamped at a border post on entering Russian territory.

Russian media said they had planned to find a border post but their passage across the shifting ice in the Bering Strait took them off course.

Russia's border guards service said it was up to the courts how long Bushby would be barred from Russia.

"In principle, if a deportation has taken place then the person is barred from the country for five years. But the court could say the time should be less, it could say more," a border guards spokeswoman said.

Hae-Yu
04-15-2006, 10:51 AM
I don't understand a lot of these governments. Here you have an expedition with widespread media attention on it. It's obvious the guy isn't a spy, smuggler, or illegal alien. He just wants to walk through. It's like the balloonists or other long-distance trekkers. Why give em a hard time? Granted it has no real scientific merit or really accomplishes much outside the guy knowing he has the guts to do it.

Some people are so hung up on the letter of the law, they are missing why the laws were enacted. You can be a stuck up prick and say "the law should apply equally to everyone." In theory that's true, but look at what the law is trying to accomplish and then decide if this case merits that application of justice. If someone complains about how things are applied, that's why you have judges.

McTucket
04-15-2006, 01:33 PM
thats why i posted it.

Phenix
04-15-2006, 01:45 PM
stupid. Thats all that is. That judge is just being a dick. Fuck him