Kuwait Times

Avalanche hits French Alps ski resort

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TIGNES: An avalanche hit a ski slope in the popular French Alps resort of Tignes yesterday but no one was hurt, the resort said. Police had said yesterday that the avalanche, which hit at about 10:00 am (0900 GMT), had engulfed “many” skiers. Searches later found that no one had been hurt. “Several skiers were affected who were cared for by resort staff,” the resort said in a statement. “Rescue workers were immediatel­y deployed. After search operations, no victims were found,” it said.

The slope is close to where an avalanche last month killed four people who were exploring in an off-piste area. Rescue workers and sniffer dogs were sent to the scene but helicopter­s could not be scrambled because of poor visibility. TV pictures showed firefighte­rs’ vehicles and ambulances at the scene. Yesterday’s avalanche risk-which is normally assessed only for off-piste and closed slopes-was at four on a scale of five. At level five, all slopes are closed.

Holiday tragedy

The avalanche on February 13, which hit during school holidays, was a “slab” avalanche, caused when dense windpacked snow breaks off from a slope. Rescuers quickly retrieved the bodies because the victims were carrying transmitte­rs designed to assist in locating them. They had been only a few dozen meters from a ski lift when the 400metre-wide avalanche ripped down the mountain. That incident brought to 14 the number of accidents recorded in the French Alps and Pyrenees so far this winter, claiming a total of seven lives.

Last winter there were 45 accidents and 21 fatalities. One of the worst avalanches in the Alps in the past decade took place in the summer of 2012 in the Mont-Blanc range. Nine climbers from Britain, Germany, Spain and Switzerlan­d were killed as they tried to scale the north face of Mont Maudit, which translates as Cursed Mountain.

Avalanches can travel at speeds of up to 400 kilometers per hour. In January, 29 people died in Italy after an avalanche buried a hotel in the central town of Rigopiano. The force of that impact was calculated by police as being equivalent to the three-storey stone and wood structure being hit by 4,000 fully loaded trucks. Most avalanches are the result of a combinatio­n of weather and geological factors. In general, an avalanche results from fresh heavy snowfall that fails to stick to snow already on the ground. —AFP

 ??  ?? TIGNES: Photo shows an avalanche site in an off-piste area after an avalanche engulfed nine people. —AFP
TIGNES: Photo shows an avalanche site in an off-piste area after an avalanche engulfed nine people. —AFP

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