Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Fears for missing in Swiss landslide

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POLICE say as many as 14 people are missing after a dramatic landslide in Switzerlan­d, which was caught on camera.

The Sun reports that the disaster took place in the Swiss village of Bondo, in Kanton Graubunden yesterday.

A search and rescue operation was under way. A group, including German, Austrian and Swiss citizens, was missing and the landslide forced the evacuation of several villages in southeaste­rn Switzerlan­d.

“In the region of Val Bondasca, eight people who were there at the time of the landslide have not been found,” the Graubunden cantonal police said in a statement.

Police said they were unable to reach eight people in the area, six of whom had been reported missing by relatives, despite intensifie­d searches by teams including an army helicopter outfitted with thermal sensing technology as well as rescue dogs.

At a news conference overnight, police officials added that a separate group of six people may also be missing, though it was unclear from family members who made the report whether these individual­s were in the area where the landslide occurred or if they were somewhere else.

“The relatives don’t know just where they were,” Lt Andrea Mittner said.

Hikers from nearby huts in the eastern canton of the Grisons had to be flown to safety after rocks and mud hit the area. An automatic alarm system was set up in 2012 after another huge landslide in the same region.

The massive rocks reached the entrance of the village and cut off the main road.

A total of 100 people were evacuated from the village. The landslide also caused a major flood that flowed down towards Bondo.

The rocks fell from Piz Cengalo in Val Bondasca, a valley close to the village.

Police said 12 farm buildings, including barns and stables, had been destroyed by the flow of debris.

Markus Walzer, a Graubuende­n police spokesman, said the weather in the region had been good in recent days, and the cause of the mudslide was not immediatel­y known.

On Sunday six hikers were hit by falling rocks in a similar incident in the alpine nation.

A rock avalanche that lasted approximat­ely 20 seconds struck a path around the Gelmersee, a popular lake in the Bernese Oberland. A CALIFORNIA teenager who says he bought a Bengal tiger cub on the streets of Tijuana for $300 was arrested when he tried to bring it into the US in his 2017 Chevy Camaro.

Luis Eudoro Valencia was charged with smuggling a Bengal tiger into the US after US Customs and Border Protection officials found the furry cub lying on the floor of the passenger side of his car during an inspection around 1.30am on Wednesday at the Otay Mesa border crossing.

“CBP officers are often faced with unusual situations,” said Pete Flores, director of field operations for Customs and Border Protection in San Diego.

The 18-year-old US citizen, who lives in Perris, said he had purchased the tiger for $300 from someone who was walking a full-sized tiger on a leash in Tijuana, according to court documents. Several Bengal tigers, which are native to South Asia, have been seized this year by Mexican authoritie­s in Tijuana. US Fish & Wildlife Service officials took custody of the male cub and handed it over to the San Diego Zoo Safari Park to care for it.

Valencia was released on a $10,000 bond and ordered to appear for a preliminar­y hearing on September 5 in federal court in San Diego.

If convicted, Valencia could face up to 20 years in prison. THE Massachuse­tts woman who won the massive $758.7 million Powerball jackpot has quit her job at the hospital where she worked for three decades and says she wants to relax.

Fifty-three-year-old Mavis Wanczyk, of Chicopee, worked at Mercy Medical Centre for 32 years.

She says she used birthdays to choose some of the numbers when she bought the winning Powerball ticket on Wednesday at a store in Chicopee.

 ?? Picture: AP ?? A US Customs and Border Protection agent holds a male tiger cub that was confiscate­d at the US border crossing at Otay Mesa.
Picture: AP A US Customs and Border Protection agent holds a male tiger cub that was confiscate­d at the US border crossing at Otay Mesa.

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