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Video interview with Sami Paakkarinen and an unidentified member of the team (there's a 30-second commercial in Norwegan in the beginning that you can't skip, but the interview is in English)
Does anyone know who the other interviewee was? From his reaction to the question he was asked, I started wondering if he could be one of the three survivors from Februay?
---------- Post added March 29th, 2014 at 01:27 PM ----------
I think you're rather unreasonable and even quite unfair in your assessment.
The official recovery action was based on the action to recover Ståle Tveitane's body in 2006, with the same divers they used then. AFAIcan see, there were two major differences between the official operation and the Finnish operation:
1: An official operation must have a more restrictive approach regarding diver safety than private individuals can. If you want to engage in an activity I consider excessively risky, that's your prerogative, but if I'm your boss and responsible for your safety, there's no way I'll allow you to do that while I'm responsible for you.
2: As Paakkarinen points out, although the British divers had experience from the Plura cave, they had never before been down where the bodies were located. The Finnish divers had been in that part of the cave and knew it better.
Frankly, I just can't see any "police foot dragging" going on here.
Does anyone know who the other interviewee was? From his reaction to the question he was asked, I started wondering if he could be one of the three survivors from Februay?
---------- Post added March 29th, 2014 at 01:27 PM ----------
Seems to be an indication that police "foot dragging" was getting to the point where civilians felt that they needed to take things into their own hands.
I'm not familiar with this cave system but if authorities don't take the needs of the families seriously then it doesn't surprise me at all that they are cut out of the loop.
I think you're rather unreasonable and even quite unfair in your assessment.
The official recovery action was based on the action to recover Ståle Tveitane's body in 2006, with the same divers they used then. AFAIcan see, there were two major differences between the official operation and the Finnish operation:
1: An official operation must have a more restrictive approach regarding diver safety than private individuals can. If you want to engage in an activity I consider excessively risky, that's your prerogative, but if I'm your boss and responsible for your safety, there's no way I'll allow you to do that while I'm responsible for you.
2: As Paakkarinen points out, although the British divers had experience from the Plura cave, they had never before been down where the bodies were located. The Finnish divers had been in that part of the cave and knew it better.
Frankly, I just can't see any "police foot dragging" going on here.