News
A Russian pensioner tied a migrant from his dacha to a homemade “parole” and…


A Russian pensioner tied a migrant from his dacha to a homemade “parole” and launched him into the sky
73-year-old Muscovite Vladimir Lisyansky has long been interested in aircraft construction and designed himself a “paralote”: a device in the form of a parachute and a homemade motor. Usually the man rode it alone, but suddenly decided to take with him on the air ride the worker who was helping him around his summer cottage, 44-year-old Nurmyrat Eiyemberdiev.
Vladimir took the matter seriously: he contacted the dispatcher at Domodedovo airport, received permission to take off, and started moving. The flight was designed for two hours, but the weather worsened, visibility was critically low, and Lisyansky decided to return.
At dusk, he lost his bearings, and as he descended, he saw the lights of the runway and the inscription “Zhukovsky.” He radioed the dispatcher about this, but he said it was not their jurisdiction. According to the man, fuel was running out, so he decided to land. Vladimir was able to successfully land the device on the steering strip. Neither he nor his passenger were injured.
The police arrived at the scene, Lisyansky and Eiyemberdiev were questioned, and the “parolet” was left as evidence under guard for the duration of the inspection. Also, an administrative protocol was drawn up against the “aeroconstructor” for violating the access control regime of a protected facility. But Nurmyrat was less fortunate: he faces deportation from Russia, since he does not have registration.
73-year-old Muscovite Vladimir Lisyansky has long been interested in aircraft construction and designed himself a “paralote”: a device in the form of a parachute and a homemade motor. Usually the man rode it alone, but suddenly decided to take with him on the air ride the worker who was helping him around his summer cottage, 44-year-old Nurmyrat Eiyemberdiev.
Vladimir took the matter seriously: he contacted the dispatcher at Domodedovo airport, received permission to take off, and started moving. The flight was designed for two hours, but the weather worsened, visibility was critically low, and Lisyansky decided to return.
At dusk, he lost his bearings, and as he descended, he saw the lights of the runway and the inscription “Zhukovsky.” He radioed the dispatcher about this, but he said it was not their jurisdiction. According to the man, fuel was running out, so he decided to land. Vladimir was able to successfully land the device on the steering strip. Neither he nor his passenger were injured.
The police arrived at the scene, Lisyansky and Eiyemberdiev were questioned, and the “parolet” was left as evidence under guard for the duration of the inspection. Also, an administrative protocol was drawn up against the “aeroconstructor” for violating the access control regime of a protected facility. But Nurmyrat was less fortunate: he faces deportation from Russia, since he does not have registration.




