Skiers killed in French Alps avalanche
March 2, 2018An avalanche swept through an area near Entraunes in the French Alps on Friday, killing at least four people, police said in a statement.
One person was taken to hospital with injuries, while the group's guide escaped unharmed. Another individual is still unaccounted for.
The group was reportedly skiing off-piste in a remote part of the Mercantour National Park when the avalanche struck just after midday. Prime Minister Edouard Philippe told reporters that a rescue operation was underway.
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"These valleys are highly popular with off-piste skiers because it's beautiful and wild," said Christophe Ollivier, a local official in nearby Vesubie.
'High' avalanche risk
The region has been blanketed in heavy snowfall brought by the so-called "Beast from the East" — a blast of Siberian icy weather moving across Europe. According to Jean-Gabriel Delacroy of the Alpes-Maritimes prefecture, warmer temperatures since Thursday have destabilized the fresh buildup of snow.
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The Meteo France weather agency had warned there was high chance of avalanches in the area, putting the risk at level four on a scale of one to five. Deputy prefect Gwenaelle Chapuis told local broadcaster BFM that a police inquiry would determine if going off-trail in such conditions "was recklessness or not."
A total of 20 people have died on mountain slopes since France's ski season began in November. Last month, an avalanche swept away a man and his 11-year-old daughter in the alpine resort of Val d'Isere. A number of other skiers were also killed in separate incidents in the Pyrenees.
nm/aw (Reuters, AP, AFP)