Oman Daily Observer

Teens rescued after 3-day ordeal in Paris catacombs

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PARIS: Two teenagers were rescued from the catacombs beneath Paris on Wednesday after getting lost in the pitch-black tunnels of the undergroun­d burial ground for three days.

The two, aged 16 and 17, were taken to hospital and were being treated for hypertherm­ia after being found by search teams and rescue dogs in the early hours of the morning.

“It was thanks to the dogs that we found them,” a spokesman for the Paris fire service said at the end of the four-hour operation. A network of around 250 kilometres of undergroun­d tunnels forms a maze beneath Paris, with only a small section open to the public at an official visitors’ site in southern Paris.

Entering the other galleries has been against the law since 1955, but daredevil school children, explorers and alternativ­e partygoers are known to access them through secret entrance points.

The transfer of human remains from Parisian cemeteries to the tunnels began towards the end of the 18th century for public health reasons, with the bones of approximat­ely six million people found there.

The ambient temperatur­e in the dank narrow passageway­s is about 15 degrees Celsius. It was not clear who had raised the alarm about the missing teenagers or why they got lost.

The operator of the Catacombs museum, a popular attraction where the queues are sometimes several hours long, stressed that no-one had ever got lost in the two-kilometre of tunnels open to the public.

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