<p>Seventeen fishermen were missing and feared dead on Monday after a Russian trawler capsized during a storm and sank in the freezing waters of the Barents Sea.</p>.<p>Officials said that two people had been rescued by a passing vessel but hopes were quickly fading that more survivors could be found during a snowstorm over the Arctic waters.</p>.<p>At a government meeting Monday Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin expressed his condolences to families of the victims and tasked officials with providing them with the necessary support.</p>.<p>"A tragedy struck today in the Barents Sea," Mishustin said. "People died," he added, without providing further details.</p>.<p>Officials said that a search-and-rescue operation was underway but that poor weather conditions had complicated the task.</p>.<p>"There is a heavy snowstorm, waves are up to four meters high and temperatures are at around 20-25 degrees Celsius below zero," Alexei Barinov, spokesman for the emergencies ministry in the northwestern region of Murmansk, told AFP.</p>.<p>"We are hoping for a New Year's miracle," he added.</p>.<p>However, a source familiar with the details of the search efforts told AFP that there was little hope of finding survivors.</p>.<p>"A person cannot last for more than 15 minutes in these conditions," the source said.</p>.<p>The privately-owned boat, called Onega, sank near the Novaya Zemlya archipelago in the Barents Sea at around 6:20 am (0330 GMT), said Ruslan Nazarov, head of the emergencies ministry's Murmansk branch.</p>.<p>Ten minutes later a passing vessel rescued two fishermen, Nazarov told reporters.</p>.<p>Officials believe the Russian-flagged vessel, which had been operating since 1979, capsized after ice buildup caused it to tilt over.</p>.<p>The disaster struck when the crew was hauling out a net with the catch, said the spokesman for the maritime and river transport agency Rosmorrechflot, Alexei Kravchenko.</p>.<p>"The vessel lost its balance and instantly capsized," he told AFP.</p>.<p>Three vessels and an Il-38 maritime patrol plane were dispatched to the scene, officials said.</p>.<p>Kravchenko said that not a single body had yet been found even though the two survivors had seen a crew member die in front of them.</p>.<p>Maritime accidents are fairly common in Russia.</p>.<p>In April 2015, a Russian trawler sank in the Okhotsk Sea off Kamchatka. Of the 132 people on board the Dalniy Vostok, just 63 were rescued.</p>.<p>In December 2011, a drilling rig capsized and sank off Sakhalin Island during a storm. More than 50 people were killed or went missing.</p>
<p>Seventeen fishermen were missing and feared dead on Monday after a Russian trawler capsized during a storm and sank in the freezing waters of the Barents Sea.</p>.<p>Officials said that two people had been rescued by a passing vessel but hopes were quickly fading that more survivors could be found during a snowstorm over the Arctic waters.</p>.<p>At a government meeting Monday Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin expressed his condolences to families of the victims and tasked officials with providing them with the necessary support.</p>.<p>"A tragedy struck today in the Barents Sea," Mishustin said. "People died," he added, without providing further details.</p>.<p>Officials said that a search-and-rescue operation was underway but that poor weather conditions had complicated the task.</p>.<p>"There is a heavy snowstorm, waves are up to four meters high and temperatures are at around 20-25 degrees Celsius below zero," Alexei Barinov, spokesman for the emergencies ministry in the northwestern region of Murmansk, told AFP.</p>.<p>"We are hoping for a New Year's miracle," he added.</p>.<p>However, a source familiar with the details of the search efforts told AFP that there was little hope of finding survivors.</p>.<p>"A person cannot last for more than 15 minutes in these conditions," the source said.</p>.<p>The privately-owned boat, called Onega, sank near the Novaya Zemlya archipelago in the Barents Sea at around 6:20 am (0330 GMT), said Ruslan Nazarov, head of the emergencies ministry's Murmansk branch.</p>.<p>Ten minutes later a passing vessel rescued two fishermen, Nazarov told reporters.</p>.<p>Officials believe the Russian-flagged vessel, which had been operating since 1979, capsized after ice buildup caused it to tilt over.</p>.<p>The disaster struck when the crew was hauling out a net with the catch, said the spokesman for the maritime and river transport agency Rosmorrechflot, Alexei Kravchenko.</p>.<p>"The vessel lost its balance and instantly capsized," he told AFP.</p>.<p>Three vessels and an Il-38 maritime patrol plane were dispatched to the scene, officials said.</p>.<p>Kravchenko said that not a single body had yet been found even though the two survivors had seen a crew member die in front of them.</p>.<p>Maritime accidents are fairly common in Russia.</p>.<p>In April 2015, a Russian trawler sank in the Okhotsk Sea off Kamchatka. Of the 132 people on board the Dalniy Vostok, just 63 were rescued.</p>.<p>In December 2011, a drilling rig capsized and sank off Sakhalin Island during a storm. More than 50 people were killed or went missing.</p>