AJUMP23
Parody of actual AJUMP23

Antarctic researcher accuses colleague of death threat and assault
South African minister ‘considering options’ after plea for help from member of team on remote base
A member of a South African research team on a remote Antarctic base has accused a colleague of physical assault and making a death threat, pleading for “immediate action” to be taken.
The accusations were made in an email sent from the base that was shared with the South African newspaper the Sunday Times.
The person making the allegations said they feared for their own and their colleagues’ safety at South Africa’s Sanae IV research base, demanding “immediate action”, the newspaper reported, quoting an email it said was sent last month.
South Africa’s environment minister, Dion George, whose department manages the country’s Antarctic programme, confirmed that an assault had taken place and that he was “considering options”, without specifying what these were.
![]()
A group picture of the researchers at the Sanae IV research station. Photograph: Alamy
“An intervention is in place,” he said. “The person who assaulted the team leader is remorseful and has been psychologically re-evaluated willingly.” Asked what triggered the alleged assault, George said: “It was a dispute over a task the team leader wanted the team to do – a weather-dependent task that required a schedule change.”
The 10-person team is not due to be relieved until December, as ice and winter storms close in on the base, which is about 100 miles south of Antarctica’s ice shelf and more than 2,600 miles south of Cape Town.
The email quoted by the Sunday Times, which removed all names, said: “Regrettably, [his] behaviour has escalated to a point that is deeply disturbing. Specifically, he physically assaulted [name withheld], which is a grave violation of personal safety and workplace norms.”
“Furthermore, he threatened to kill [name withheld], creating an environment of fear and intimidation. I remain deeply concerned about my own safety, constantly wondering if I might become the next victim.”
The email demanded: “It is imperative that immediate action is taken to ensure my safety and the safety of all employees.”
It said “numerous concerns” had been raised about the alleged attacker, between the team being dropped off in Antarctica by South Africa’s SA Agulhas II ship in late December and the boat departing a little over a month later.
The SA Agulhas II is not due to make the 10- to 15-day journey from Cape Town to pick up the overwintering team and drop off a new team until December. There is a German base, the Neumayer Station III, about 137 miles north-west of South Africa’s station. Farther inland, about 118 miles south-east, is Norway’s Troll Base.
A spokesperson for South Africa’s department of forestry, fisheries and the environment said: “The wellness unit is in contact with the team at the base on a continuous basis to find solutions and sustainable way forward for the wellbeing of the team members located in that remote base.
“A full investigation is currently being commissioned and the department will act accordingly in relation to any wrong conduct against any official that has misconducted themselves.”
South Africa first established a scientific station in Antarctica in 1960, when it took over a Norwegian base. Researchers at the base, which comprises three linked, double-storey buildings, 44 metres long by 14 metres wide, study the Earth’s electromagnetic fields, as well as Antarctic geology and biodiversity.
South Africa also has research stations on Marion Island, 1,300 miles south-east of Cape Town, and Gough Island, 1,600 miles south-west of the Cape of Good Hope, where it leases land from Britain, due to the latter’s control of Saint Helena.
It is not the first time that one of South Africa’s Antarctic teams has been involved in a violent controversy. In 2017, a Marion Island research team member allegedly attacked a colleague’s laptop with an axe, after a woman involved with the colleague turned down his marriage proposal.
SA team fear for safety at Antarctica base after 'assaults, death threat'
Overwintering team will undergo new psychometric tests

A real-life horror movie is playing out at South Africa's isolated Antarctica base where one of the 10-member overwintering team faces accusations of being mentally unstable and violent, prompting intervention by the government.

Scared Antarctic researchers plead for help after ‘assault,’ ‘death threats’ - National | Globalnews.ca
The problems at the isolated SANAE IV base stem from email allegations that a team member attacked the base leader and made threats.
Scientists at a remote research base in Antarctica have pleaded for their rescue, alleging assault, sexual harassment and death threats from a team member they say is mentally unstable.
The problems at the isolated SANAE IV base were first reported by South Africa’s Sunday Times newspaper, which said it had seen an email from a team member to authorities last month claiming the man had attacked the base leader and made threats.
The email pleaded for help.
“His behavior has escalated to a point that is deeply disturbing,” the email said, according to the Sunday Times. “I remain deeply concerned about my own safety, constantly wondering if I might become the next victim.”
The report alleged the man made a death threat and accused the team member of sexually assaulting another.
“Furthermore, he threatened to kill [another team member], creating an environment of fear and intimidation,” the unnamed researcher wrote.
The writer said it is now “imperative that immediate action is taken to ensure my safety and the safety of all employees.”
Rough to be stuck in isolation with someone going insane. The mountains of madness.