Friday, January 4, 2019

norwegian police abandon rescue efforts for four skiers presumed dead in avalanche

norwegian police abandon rescue efforts for four skiers presumed dead in avalanche










Three men from Finland and a woman from Sweden were reported missing by a friend on Wednesday afternoon in Tamokdalen in northern Norway, 60 miles south of Tromso.
Rescue teams launched several expeditions to the area where the skiers were last seen but were not able to find where they had been carried by the avalanche until it was too late.
Police spokesman Morten Pettersen said they “no longer have any hopes of finding anyone alive”.
The avalanche which is thought to have swept away the group was 300m wide. Heavy snowfall and low visibility since it poured down the mountains had hampered rescuers’ efforts.




On Thursday, rescuers discovered ski tracks which went into the avalanche but did not come out.
Then, a day later, a helicopter flying overhead picked up the signals from two transceiver beacons used by skiers to give their positions when caught in an avalanche.
But the Tromso police chief, Astrid Elisabeth Nilsen, told a press conference on Friday the three Finns and Swede would have died long before their location was discovered.




“This confirms our assumption that the missing have been caught in the avalanche,” she told reporters.
“It has now been 38 hours since the avalanche took place. Now that we have confirmed their positions, we believe it is no longer probable that any of the four have survived.”
Mads Gilbert, a doctor from the University Hospital of North Norway, said it was “impossible to survive nearly two days buried in snow”.






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“We are absolutely convinced that there is no medical basis to continue to search for [the skiers] as if they were still alive.”

Those who survive avalanches are pulled from the snow in “minutes, not hours”, he added. 

Thursday, January 3, 2019

10 THINGS YOU MAY not know . . . . .

10 THINGS YOU MAY NOT KNOW ABOUT THE UN



The United Nations is the world’s platform to build understanding between nations, find ways to cooperate, and launch coordinated action on problems that transcend borders, from terrorism to climate change to pandemics. While many people read the headlines coming out of the UN Security Council, the organization is also active around the world, heading into crises to help the world’s most vulnerable people, promoting sustainable development, protecting human rights, and advancing peace.
As UN Foundation Founder and Chairman Ted Turner has written, “The UN does what no country can do alone. …In an interconnected world, we all have a stake in ensuring human dignity for every person.”
Here are 10 facts about the United Nations’ work that you may not know:
1. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights is the first document to detail the fundamental human rights that must be protected. The declaration was proclaimed by the General Assembly in 1948. Security human rights is a key pillar of the UN’s work.
2. The annual UN Peacekeeping budget is less than 0.5% of global military spending. The UN currently has 117,000 peacekeepers helping keep peace in 15 operations on 4 continents.
3. The UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) provides food and assistance to 80 million people in some 80 countries. Additionally, WFP is planning for the future by developing programs to ensure a more stable food environment.
4. The UN and its agencies help over 1 million women a month overcome pregnancy complications. The UN Population Fund (UNFPA) works to make motherhood safer, among other responsibilities.
5. The UN and its agencies supply vaccines to 45% of the world’s children. For example, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the World Health Organization (WHO) are core partners of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, which has helped reduce polio cases by over 99% since 1988.
6. The UN supports about 67 countries a year with their elections. The UN also uses diplomacy to prevent conflict.
7. The UN assists people displaced by violence, conflict, and persecution. The UN and its agencies provide life-saving help to refugees and forcibly displaced people. Today, there are more than 65 million forcibly displaced people.
8. The Paris Agreement on climate change was signed by the largest amount of countries ever in a single day. On Earth Day 2016, 174 world leaders signed the agreement at the UN headquarters in New York. The UN is committed to fighting climate change, and the agreement builds on the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.
9. The UN brought countries together in 2015 to launch a plan to end poverty, reduce inequalities, and protect the planet by 2030. The Sustainable Development Goals provide a common blueprint for countries to reach a world of dignity for all by 2030.
10. A majority of Americans believe in the importance of the UN.According to a new bipartisan poll released by the Better World Campaign, 79% of U.S. voters believe the UN is needed today.
In an era of complex and connected challenges, the UN remains vital to global peace and progress. On October 24, UN Day, and every other day of the year, join us in thanking the UN for its work: http://bit.ly/2xTtPau.

Friday, December 28, 2018

White Christmas rendition

Pennsylvania cop ends armed standoff with White Christmas rendition

  • 28 December 2018
Image shows a close up of the 'Police' patch on the back of a police officer's jacket.Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionThe police negotiator sang four verses of the festive classic White Christmas (file image)
A successful police negotiator needs some key qualities. Calmness under pressure, a reassuring presence, and a knack for listening to name just a few.
But it turns out that a decent singing voice can also come in handy.
One Swat team negotiator in the US state of Pennsylvania brought an armed standoff to a close with his version of the festive classic White Christmas.
But it is not clear whether the man surrendered due to the perfection or the sheer awfulness of the rendition.
The nine-hour standoff began late on Christmas Day when a man in Chester County began behaving erratically and barricaded himself into his home.
A worried family member called the police when the man allegedly armed himself with a rifle.
But when officers arrived he reportedly opened fire, damaging a number of police vehicles.
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"Over a long and cold night, they kept negotiating with the man," District Attorney Thomas Hogan wrote in a Facebook post.
He said that he arrived on the scene with (Reindeer-shaped) Christmas biscuits to boost the morale of the officers before one negotiator made a sudden breakthrough.
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After prolonged talks, the man reportedly demanded that a police officer sing him White Christmas.
A negotiator then sang four verses of the hit, thought to be the biggest-selling single of all time, before the man surrendered at 06:00 local time and was taken into custody.
"You can't make this stuff up," Mr Hogan wrote. "This being Swat, they ate the cookies, made fun of each other, and went home to their families, quietly satisfied with a job well done."
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