Senin, 24 Mei 2021

International aviation industry roiled by Belarus jet diversion - Al Jazeera English

Global aviation faces its biggest political crisis in years after Belarus scrambled a fighter jet and flagged what turned out to be a false bomb alert to detain a dissident journalist, prompting outrage from the United States and Europe.

Some European airlines immediately began avoiding Belarus airspace, a key corridor between Western Europe and Moscow and a route for long-haul flights between western Europe and Asia.

Flightradar24 tracking data showed at least one Ryanair flight avoiding Belarus, adding hundreds of miles to its trip, and Latvian carrier airBaltic said it had decided not to use the country’s airspace “until the situation becomes clearer”.

“We, like all the European airlines are looking for guidance today from the European authorities and from NATO,” Ryanair Chief Executive Michael O’Leary told Ireland’s Newstalk radio.

Others, including Chinese and Turkish carriers, continued to fly over Belarus, which charges euro-denominated fees to use its airspace. Each flight brings Minsk revenue equivalent to some $500, adding up to millions each year, a Belarus official said.

The European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) said it had notified its 31 member states about the incident and an airline source said the agency had recommended “caution” over Belarus.

Aviation experts said a decades-old system of cooperation now faces a crucial test under the glare of East-West tensions.

The United Nations’ International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) said the incident may have contravened a core aviation treaty: part of the international order created after World War II.

“ICAO is strongly concerned by the apparent forced landing of a Ryanair flight and its passengers, which could be in contravention of the Chicago Convention,” it said on Sunday.

But experts cautioned that calls from some Western politicians for the outright closure of Belarus airspace would come up against tough obstacles.

Under global aviation rules, neither ICAO nor any nation can close another’s airspace, but some, such as the US, have the authority to tell their own airlines not to fly there.

The US said it had called for a meeting of ICAO’s 36-nation council, which has the power to investigate any situation that hinders the development of international aviation.

“It looks like a gross abuse of the [Chicago] Convention. It’s piracy,” Kevin Humphreys, a former Irish aviation regulator, said of the Belarus incident.

No regulator

Global airlines called for an investigation backed by the European Union.

“We strongly condemn any interference or requirement for landing of civil aviation operations that is inconsistent with the rules of international law,” said the International Air Transport Association (IATA).

“A full investigation by competent international authorities is needed,” said IATA, which represents about 280 airlines but does not include Ryanair among its members.

It was not immediately clear how a probe would be organised.

Although highly regulated at a national level, and supported by globally harmonised rules to keep skies safe, aviation lacks a global policeman to avoid constant disputes over sovereignty.

While it has no regulatory power, ICAO sits at the centre of a system of safety and security standards that operates across political barriers but requires an often slow-moving consensus.

The rules are managed through the Montreal-based agency by its 193 members, including Belarus, and ICAO has only rarely become directly involved in matters such as airport security.

ICAO was thrown into discord over a wave of hijackings in the 1980s. Back then, the issue was whether to oblige countries to agree to let hijacked aircraft land on their soil.

Humphreys said it would be the first time in memory that the agency has had to ponder accusations that one of its own member countries had forced a plane to land, in what Ryanair’s O’Leary called “state-sponsored hijacking”.

Belarus said on Monday that its controllers had only issued “recommendations” to Ryanair pilots.

Russia accused the West of hypocrisy, citing the case of a Bolivian presidential plane forced to land in Austria in 2013 and a Belarus jetliner ordered to land in Ukraine in 2016.

In 2013, Bolivia said then-President Evo Morales’s plane had been diverted over suspicions that former US spy agency contractor Edward Snowden, wanted by Washington for divulging secret details of US surveillance activities, was on board.

But aviation experts said the freedoms extended to civil airliners do not apply to presidential or state aircraft, which need special permission to enter another country’s airspace.

In the 2016 incident, Belarus national carrier Belavia said it had demanded compensation from Ukraine.

Lawyers say any probe or legal claim would also have to plough through a tangle of jurisdictions typical of liberalised air travel: a Polish-registered jet flown by an Irish group between EU nations Greece and Lithuania, over non-EU Belarus.

Under the 1944 Chicago Convention – also known as the Convention on International Civil Aviation – each country has sovereignty over its own airspace, though the treaty prohibits any use of civil aviation that may endanger safety.

But the right to overfly other countries is contained in a side treaty called the International Air Services Transit Agreement, of which Belarus is not a member.

A separate 1971 treaty that includes Belarus outlaws the seizure of aircraft or knowingly communicating false information in a way that endangers aircraft safety.

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2021-05-24 18:17:25Z
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Two schoolboys ‘mimic George Floyd murder in sick attack on black classmate’... - The Sun

POLICE are investigating claims that two schoolboys attacked a black pupil - by mimicking the brutal assault on George Floyd.

The teenagers are accused of targeting their classmate before re-enacting scenes which sparked Black Lives Matter protests across the globe. 

George Floyd was killed by Derek Chauvin in footage that shocked the world
George Floyd was killed by Derek Chauvin in footage that shocked the worldCredit: Refer to Caption

Mr Floyd was killed in Minneapolis on May 25 last year when Derek Chauvin knelt on his neck and back for nine minutes and 29 seconds. 

A year later, The Sun can reveal that cops are now investigating whether two pupils at a school in Nottingham set upon a black pupil and copied the horrifying footage. 

It’s believed the boys have been suspended pending a police investigation. 

Mr Floyd was killed in Minneapolis on May 25 last year when Derek Chauvin knelt on his neck and back for nine minutes and 29 seconds.
Mr Floyd was killed in Minneapolis on May 25 last year when Derek Chauvin knelt on his neck and back for nine minutes and 29 seconds.Credit: AFP
Minneapolis ex-officers (left to right) Derek Chauvin, Tou Thao, J. Alexander Kueng and Thomas Kiernan Lane following their arrest over the killing of George Floyd
Minneapolis ex-officers (left to right) Derek Chauvin, Tou Thao, J. Alexander Kueng and Thomas Kiernan Lane following their arrest over the killing of George FloydCredit: AFP

The headteacher said: “I can confirm that we are treating an incident that happened in school on Thursday April 29 extremely seriously. 

“We responded quickly to the situation and took appropriate action. 

“The incident is a live police investigation, and we continue to work closely with the families involved. 

“Our school is committed to creating a caring community that provides equality of opportunity for all.” 

George Floyd's dying words, "I can't breathe," became a rallying cry in a wave of street demonstrations against his killing
George Floyd's dying words, "I can't breathe," became a rallying cry in a wave of street demonstrations against his killingCredit: Reuters

A Department for Education spokesman said: “We are aware of this incident and the steps being taken by the school to support the victim and their family. 

“Racism, discrimination and violent behaviour have no place in our schools, nor in society. 

“The Equality Act makes it unlawful to discriminate against pupils on the basis of their race and we expect schools to take a stand against bullying, discrimination and harassment of all kinds.”  

Detective Inspector Ruby Burrow, of Nottinghamshire Police, said: "We are actively investigating an alleged incident at a local school which was reported on Thursday 29 April.

"Officers have spoken to four school children under caution with their parents and are continuing to speak to a number of witnesses as part of the investigation. 

An inaugural remembrance rally held two days before the one year anniversary of George Floyd's death in Minneapolis, Minnesota
An inaugural remembrance rally held two days before the one year anniversary of George Floyd's death in Minneapolis, MinnesotaCredit: AFP
George Floyd's death triggered worldwide protests against racism
George Floyd's death triggered worldwide protests against racismCredit: AFP

“We are liaising with the school and the parents of the victim to keep them updated.

“We urge young people and parents to refrain from making any speculative comment as this is very much a live investigation.”

Chauvin, 45, will be sentenced next month after he was found guilty of second-degree murder, third-degree murder and manslaughter in April. 

Mr Floyd was being arrested when police bodycam footage revealed he said more than 20 times he could not breathe as he was restrained in handcuffs while lying on the floor.

Three other officers are due to face trial later this year on aiding-and-abetting charges. 

Flowers lie at a memorial one year on from his death
Flowers lie at a memorial one year on from his deathCredit: PA

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2021-05-24 14:34:00Z
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UK airlines told to avoid Belarusian airspace after journalist arrest - BBC News

The UK government has told airlines to avoid Belarusian airspace after a Ryanair flight was diverted to Minsk and an opposition journalist arrested.

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps tweeted that the move was necessary "to keep passengers safe".

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab told MPs the interception of the flight was a "shocking assault on civil aviation".

Dissident journalist Roman Protasevich, 26, was removed from the plane and arrested at Minsk airport on Sunday.

Belarus scrambled a fighter jet to force the plane - which was travelling from Athens in Greece to Vilnius, Lithuania - to land in the Belarusian capital after saying there had been a bomb threat.

Police took Mr Protasevich away when passengers disembarked.

Mr Shapps said he has also suspended the operating permit of Belarus' state airline, Belavia, effectively banning it from the UK.

The airline's timetable shows it operates a three-times weekly flight from Minsk to London's Gatwick airport.

Sniffer dog checks bags taken off Ryanair flight at Minsk
EPA

Meanwhile Mr Raab told the House of Commons the interception was a "shocking assault on civil aviation and an assault on international law".

He added that further sanctions were being considered against Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko's regime and that the country's ambassador in London had been summoned so the UK could convey its "condemnation of these acts".

The foreign secretary also called for the release of Mr Protasevich from the "spurious charges" he faces.

"Mr Lukashenko's regime must be held to account for such reckless and dangerous behaviour," Mr Raab added.

He said the UK was working to explore "every potential diplomatic option" and was "actively considering and co-ordinating with our allies on further sanctions on those responsible for this outlandish conduct".

Labour's shadow foreign secretary Lisa Nandy condemned Belarus' act of "modern piracy" which she said had amounted to a state hijacking, and was an "assault on the freedoms of the air and on freedom of speech".

She added: "Unless the consequences are swift, robust and co-ordinated it will create an extraordinarily dangerous precedent that will put journalists, dissidents and activists from the UK or anywhere else at risk every time they board a plane."

Conservative MP Tom Tugendhat, chairman of the Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee, urged the government to call for the suspension of energy pipelines in Belarus.

He welcomed the government's new rules on flights, and asked Mr Raab if he would go "one step further" and "call for a suspension" of the Nord Stream 2 and Yamal energy pipelines that run through Belarus "which is where the money comes from that supports this tyrannous regime".

Mr Raab said the UK would "consider and consult with our partners and see what further action they are willing to take as well".

The incident has attracted widespread criticism from across the European Union, with countries calling for the immediate release of Mr Protasevich and a full investigation.

Ryanair chief executive Michael O'Leary told Irish Newstalk radio earlier that the interception was a "case of state-sponsored hijacking... state-sponsored piracy".

"It appears the intent of the authorities was to remove a journalist and his travelling companion... we believe there were some KGB agents offloaded at the airport as well," Mr O'Leary added.

A spokesperson for the UK Civil Aviation Authority said following the government's decision it had "suspended all foreign carrier permits held by Belarusian air carriers until further notice" - a move which applies to scheduled and charter operators.

"The Civil Aviation Authority has also issued a notice to all UK-registered airlines requesting that they avoid overflight of any territory of the Republic of Belarus," the spokesperson added.

Who is Roman Protasevich?

He is a former editor of Nexta, a media outlet with a Telegram channel that played a key role for political opposition during last year's elections in Belarus.

Mr Protasevich left Belarus in 2019 to live in exile in Lithuania. From there he covered the events of the 2020 presidential election, after which he was charged with terrorism and inciting riots.

The election, won by incumbent President Lukashenko, is widely believed to have been rigged.

President Lukashenko, who has been in power for 27 years, has been nicknamed "Europe's last dictator".

Mr Protasevich was in Athens to attend an economic conference along with Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, the opposition leader who claimed victory in the election and who also lives in exile in Lithuania.

He now works for a different Telegram channel, Belamova. He stepped in to write for it after blogger Igor Losik was arrested by the Belarusian authorities in June last year.

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2021-05-24 16:08:38Z
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Italy cable car crash: Five-year-old boy in critical condition is lone survivor - The Times

A five-year-old boy who survived an Italian cable car crash that killed 14, including his parents, is in a critical condition in hospital as questions mount over how the car’s emergency brake failed.

Eitan Biran, who also lost his brother and two grandparents in the disaster at Mount Mottarone in northern Italy yesterday, was conscious as he reached hospital in Turin and cried out, “Leave me alone, I’m scared,” as doctors treated his broken legs and head and chest wounds.

A nine-year-old boy who was taken to hospital died of his injuries. Eitan, the lone survivor of the disaster, was one of ten passengers thrown from the cable car after it fell about 15 metres just before reaching the summit of Mount Mottarone at around

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2021-05-24 11:00:00Z
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‘A war declaration’: Palestinians in Israel decry mass arrests - Al Jazeera English

Israeli police announced their intention to arrest hundreds of Palestinian citizens of Israel over the coming days for their participation in recent sit-ins in support of Palestinians in occupied East Jerusalem and the besieged Gaza Strip.

The wave of mass arrests will take place as part of what police called “operation law and order”. It is intended to penalise those who have taken part in demonstrations against settler violence, the Israeli forces’ crackdown on the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, and the military’s 11-day bombardment campaign of Gaza, which killed 248 people.

In a statement on Sunday night, Israeli police said some 1,550 people have already been arrested since May 9 and the campaign is a “continuation” that aims to “prosecute” demonstrators who have over the past two weeks taken to the streets in towns and cities across Israel.

Thousands of security forces from “all units” will be deployed to carry out raids, it said, in towns and cities predominantly inhabited by Palestinian citizens of Israel, who make up about 20 percent of the country’s population.

The statement did not say the campaign would target Jewish settlers who have attacked Palestinians and their homes, as documented in videos and images widely shared on social media.

Police – including border guards and reserve brigades – will search homes and conduct “investigations” until charges are submitted and prison sentences are imposed, it added.

Hassan Jabareen, the general director of Adalah, the Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel, declared the campaign a “war” against Palestinian demonstrators, political activists and minors.

The massive arrest operation is a “militarised war against Palestinian citizens of Israel,” Jabareen said in a statement sent to Al Jazeera on Monday, urging a “rapid response” from all Palestinian political movements, parties, and from the High Follow-up Committee for Arab Citizens of Israel.

The purpose of the arrests is to “intimidate and to exact revenge on Palestinian citizens of Israel – ‘to settle the score’ with Palestinians, in the Israeli police’s own words – for their political positions and activities”, he said.

Disrupting protests

Rallies in cities including Haifa, Yafa, Lydd and Nazareth started earlier this month in solidarity with Palestinian families facing the imminent forced expulsion from their homes in Sheikh Jarrah.

During the sit-ins, several Palestinians were assaulted by Jewish settlers who at times, backed by Israeli police, marched in the streets chanting anti-Palestinian slogans, including “death to Arabs”.

Others were killed as the demonstrations quickly grew following Israeli forces’ attack on worshippers in Al-Aqsa Mosque compound and the subsequent Israeli military assault on Gaza.

On May 10, a Palestinian resident was shot dead by a Jewish settler who was part of a far-right mob. And on May 19, Mohammed Kiwan, 17, succumbed to his wounds after being shot in the head by Israeli police in the town of Umm al-Fahem.

Dozens of others have been arrested with some still awaiting formal charges.

To date, 140 indictments have been brought against 230 people, the majority of whom are Palestinians, including minors, local media reported. They have been charged with assaulting police officers, endangering the lives of citizens in the streets, demonstrating, throwing stones and arson.

‘Didn’t want us to go home’

In Yafa, Bashar Ali, a 25-year-old university student, was among the 1,550 arrested during the past two weeks.

He was with a group of protesters who suffered beatings and tear gas inhalation after protesting against Israel’s bombardment and continuing siege of Gaza on May 11.

“It was a peaceful sit-in of some 250 people,” Ali said. “Some of us were working on raising funds for those wounded in Jerusalem and Gaza.”

After gathering for nearly two hours at one of Yafa’s community parks, protesters began making their way home at about 6:30pm, but the police blocked the main streets.

“They didn’t want us to go home. Some police officers began assaulting us, I saw them beat an elderly man and a young lady,” Ali recalled.

“We confronted them and that’s when a group of armed policemen gathered and arrested me along with several others,” he added.

Ali was released the following day, but is now under house arrest for one month. He is currently in Kokab, a village in al-Jalil (Galilee), where, according to him, six people were arrested from their homes overnight.

Tensions continue over the forced expulsion of Palestinian families from their homes in the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood in favour of Jewish families [Alaa Badarneh/ EPA-EFE]
Janan Abdu is a Haifa-based lawyer with the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel who has volunteered to defend imprisoned Palestinians.

“These are not just police forces but also include special units – border police, secret services and undercover forces,” she said.

Abdu said she noticed similarities in the “kind of violations and ill-treatment” these same units used against Palestinians in Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank.

“They treat their citizens as an enemy. There has always been two systems: one for Arabs and one for the Jews,” said Abdu.

“Police have attacked and arrested people recording and documenting the assaults. In some cases, police also collected false evidence from minors during interrogation sessions during detention.”

‘Major miscalculation’

Meanwhile, Ahmad Tibi, a member of the Israeli parliament with the Joint List, the Palestinian-majority electoral alliance, said Israel did not expect the Palestinian citizens of Israel to rally in support of others in Jerusalem and Gaza.

The “major miscalculation” by Israeli police came even though this is not the first time Palestinian citizens of Israel have rallied against Israeli policies in Jerusalem and other parts of the occupied territories.

In the latest round of sit-ins, police “lost control” inside Israel, Tibi said, describing the latest campaign as a “show” and a bid by Israeli police to assert control at the expense of the Palestinian people.

It is a “miserable attempt to intimidate our youth to stop them from exercising their right to express their opinion”, he said.

Majd Kayyal, a Haifa-based activist, agreed.

“The Israeli police lost their ability to frighten and terrorise the Palestinians. This is why they launched this campaign,” he told Al Jazeera.

More than 500 Palestinian homes are expected to be raided in the next 48 hours, Kayyal said, citing Israeli police and media reports.

“They want to restore this feeling of terror in us, to teach us a lesson. But they also want to disrupt Palestinian unity – which is what this is uprising is all about.”

Meanwhile, calls for action on social media by Palestinians in Israel – who amount to 1.8 million people – have spread with many also describing the announcement as a “declaration of war”.

Palestinian citizens of Israel have long been discriminated against in many aspects of life, including the right to due process.

But according to Kayyal, protests are not enough to stop the cycle of violence.

“We need to start a new chapter as Palestinians inside Israel. We need to rip apart and dismantle Israel’s fragmentation policy [of Palestinians under its control],” he said.

“Our fight as Palestinian citizens of Israel is a part of the collective fight of the Palestinian people against Israel’s settler-colonial project.”

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2021-05-24 13:25:10Z
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Belarus Ryanair flight diverted: Passengers describe panic on board - BBC News

Passengers on board a Ryanair flight that was suddenly diverted as it began its descent into Vilnius, Lithuania, have described their panic as they changed course with no explanation.

Flight FR4978 was bound for Lithuania from Greece when it was forced to switch direction for the Belarusian capital Minsk on Sunday so the authorities there could arrest dissident journalist Roman Protasevich, 26.

The pilot announced the emergency diversion, but provided no details.

The plane was then accompanied by a fighter jet that had been scrambled to guide it to Minsk.

In the moments beforehand, everything had been calm and nothing had appeared out of the ordinary.

A sudden dive and fears of a crash

"We all on the plane had panicked because we thought we were going to crash," Lithuanian passenger Raselle Grigoryeva told broadcaster ABC News.

"This was a sudden dive, changing the altitude very drastically. It was very violent. I've never felt this on an airplane. Everybody was in shock," she said.

Flight FR4978 had turned east to Minsk just before it had reached the Lithuanian border.

Map
1px transparent line

Belarus had cited a bomb threat as why the flight needed to change, but the claim turned out to be false.

Journalist Protasevich 'scared' and 'trembling'

Another Lithuanian passenger, named only as Mantas, told Reuters news agency that the moment the pilot announced the flight was being diverted to Minsk, Mr Protasevich stood up and opened an overhead locker containing his luggage.

"[He] took the luggage, and was trying to split things, like the computer he gave to his girlfriend," Mantas said. "I think he made a mistake. There were plenty of people so he could give the things to me or other passengers and not the girlfriend, who was also, I think, arrested."

Passengers of Ryanair flight FR4978 arrive at Vilnius airport
Reuters

Mantas added that he witnessed security forces at Minsk airport using sniffer dogs to search Mr Protasevich's luggage.

One passenger, who was not named, said officers had used physical force when arresting the journalist and that he appeared "super-scared", adding: "I looked at him directly into his eyes and he was very sad."

Passenger Edvinas Dimsa, 37, told AFP that it was clear that Mr Protasevich was "very much afraid". "It looked like if the window had been open, he would have jumped out of it."

Roman Protasevich addresses the crowd next to a famous Gdansk's Shipyard Gate number 2 on August 31, 2020 during 'Free Poland To Free Belarus'
Getty Images

Another passenger told Lithuania's Delfi news that while Mr Protasevich remained relatively calm, he was visibly trembling when he left the plane, with officers around him "all the time".

"We asked him what was going on... he said: 'The death penalty awaits me here.'"

Others described how Mr Protasevich had immediately identified himself to officers, who then appeared to confiscate his passport.

Passengers held in Minsk for hours without info

The remaining passengers were kept at Minsk airport for hours as their luggage and paperwork were checked.

"We were eight hours there. We didn't get any information what happened, only what we could find on the internet," one passenger told Reuters.

A young woman stands with a poster reading: "I am, we are Roman Protasevich" and the Belarus flag as passengers disembark from a Ryanair passenger plane from Athens, Greece
PETRAS MALUKAS/GETTY IMAGES

Ryanair flight FR4978 finally landed in Vilnius at about 21:30.

Mr Protasevich is a former editor of media Nexta, a media operation with a Telegram channel. He left Belarus in 2019 to live in exile in Lithuania. From there he covered the events of the 2020 Belarus presidential election, after which he was charged with terrorism and inciting riots.

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2021-05-24 11:29:57Z
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Mottarone cable car crash: Italy investigates cause of accident - BBC News

Italy has launched an investigation into the cause of Sunday's cable car accident that left 14 people dead.

The car plunged 20m (65ft) into the side of the Mottarone mountain near Lake Maggiore in northern Italy.

Thirteen people died at the scene, including a two-year-old child. Two other children, aged nine and five, were airlifted to hospital in Turin but the older child later died.

Five Israeli nationals were among the dead, Israel's foreign ministry said.

On Monday, the crumpled remains of the cable car were sealed off and technicians prepared to examine the wreckage.

Prosecutors in Milan said they had opened an investigation into involuntary homicide and negligence. Investigators said they had also seized the operating company's technical and maintenance documentation.

A lawyer for the company, Ferrovie del Mottarone, said maintenance and checks had been carried out regularly, La Repubblica newspaper reported.

The cables were not due to be replaced until 2029, the newspaper added.

"Everything will be subject to technical checks in the coming days", said local public prosecutor Olimpia Bossi. "We are carrying out investigations and technical checks."

Image from Italian Fire and Rescue Service shows Rescuers at work at the area of the cable car accident, near Lake Maggiore, northern Italy, 23 May 2021
EPA
Image from Italian Fire and Rescue Service shows Rescuers at work at the area of the cable car accident, near Lake Maggiore, northern Italy, 23 May 2021
EPA

Matteo Gasparini, provincial head of Italy's Alpine rescue service, said there appeared to have been two major problems - the breakage of the cable and the failure of the emergency brake.

Initial reports said the towing cable failed at about 12:30 (10:30 GMT) as the gondola neared the end of its 20-minute journey to the top of the mountain from the resort town of Stresa. Nearby hikers heard a loud hiss before it crashed to the ground and rolled downhill into trees.

"The others [cables] are intact, but it is too early to say what happened from a technical point of view," local police commander Lt Col Giorgio Santacroce said, according to Ansa news agency.

"It will be necessary to understand why the safety devices have not been triggered, which should keep the cabin anchored," he added.

Marcella Severino, the mayor of Stresa, said the cable car "began to go backwards (and) probably hit a pylon".

What do we know of the victims?

The occupants of the cable car were from five families, Ansa reported. Three lived in Lombardy, one in Emilia-Romagna and one in Calabria.

Israel's foreign ministry said the five Israelis who died were Amit Biran, 30, his wife Tal Peleg-Biran, 26, and their son Tom Biran, aged two, who lived in Pavia, Lombardy, and Ms Peleg-Biran's grandparents Barbara Cohen Konisky, 70, and Yitzhak Cohen, 82, who were from Tel Aviv. The couple's other son, five-year-old Eitan Biran, is in hospital in Turin with serious head and leg injuries.

The Regina Margherita children's hospital said on Monday that Eitan had undergone an operation and was now sedated. The child's aunt - Mr Biran's sister - was at the hospital.

"He spent a quiet night, now all that remains is to hope," said hospital director general Giovanni La Valle.

Map showing Italy as well as graphic of the crash site on satellite image
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The cable car service originally opened in 1970 and was closed for maintenance between 2014 and 2016, local media reported. It recently reopened following the lifting of coronavirus measures and numbers inside the gondolas were restricted. Each cable car can usually hold about 35 passengers.

Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi described the crash as a "tragic accident" and said he was receiving updates from local and national officials.

"I express the condolences of the whole government to the families of the victims," he said in a statement.

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2021-05-24 10:35:35Z
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