Limbless Frenchman swims between US, Russian islands

French four-member amputee swimmer Philippe Croizon (R), and his friend swimmer Arnaud Chassery, celebrate after he swam between islands in the icy Bering Strait on August 18, 2012 to cross from America to Asia in the final part of a quest to link all continents. The Frenchman braved strong currents and near-freezing temperatures in a roughly four kilometre (2.5 mile) swim between the US island of Little Diomede and Big Diomede in Russia that he said took about one hour and 20 minutes. Croizon, 43, equipped with leg prosthesis, began this project “Nager au-dela des frontières” (Swim beyond borders) last May. PATRICK FILLEUX/AFP

LITTLE DIOMEDE ISLAND, Alaska — Quadruple amputee Philippe Croizon swam between islands in the icy Bering Strait Friday to cross from America to Asia in the final part of a quest to link all continents.

The Frenchman braved strong currents and near-freezing temperatures in a roughly four kilometre (2.5 mile) swim between the US island of Little Diomede and Big Diomede in Russia that he said took about one hour and 20 minutes.

“This was the hardest swim of my life, with a water temperature of four degrees Celsius (39 degrees Fahrenheit) and strong currents,” the deeply moved Croizon told Agence France-Presse after reaching the Russian island.

“We made it,” said the 44-year-old, who was accompanied by long-distance swimmer Arnaud Chassery, 35.

Since May the pair has swum across three other straits separating the continents and Friday’s was the last.

They plunged through the ocean up to the limit of the territorial waters separating Russia and the United States, and then continued a few hundred metres (yards) into Russian waters to enter Asia.

The men arrived on Alaska’s Little Diomede island in a fishing boat last Sunday but their swim was held up for four days because of a powerful storm with winds of up to 140 kilometres (87 miles) an hour.

Over the past three months, they have swum from Papua New Guinea to Indonesia, crossing from Oceania to Asia; across the Red Sea from Egypt to Jordan between Africa and Asia; and from Spain to Morocco, between Europe to Africa.

Croizon had all four limbs amputated in 1994 after being struck by an electric shock of more than 20,000 volts as he tried to remove a TV antenna from a roof. He uses flippers attached to prosthetic limbs to swim.

He said his accomplishment was a message of encouragement to other disabled people.

“I tell them: ‘Everything is possible, everything can be done when you have the will to go beyond yourself’. We’re all equal, disabled and non-disabled people on all continents,” he said.

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