Three dead in mid-air Australia skydiving collision

The Arizona Arsenal skydive team jumps during the National Skydiving Championships in Ottawa, Illinois in this handout picture taken on September 13, 2013. (File photo: United States Parachuting Association/Handout via Reuters)
Updated 13 October 2017
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Three dead in mid-air Australia skydiving collision

SYDNEY: Three people died Friday in what is believed to be a mid-air skydiving collision, with one of the victims found in someone’s garden.
Two men in their 30s and a woman in her 50s were found dead at Mission Beach, south of popular tourist town Cairns, mid-afternoon.
“Initial investigations indicate that a solo skydiver may have collided with tandem skydivers in mid-air with their parachutes failing to deploy correctly,” police said in a statement.
“Two men in their 30s and a woman in her 50s were located deceased at the scene.”
The Australian Broadcasting Corporation cited ambulance officials as saying one of them fell onto someone’s lawn.
“We had a report of a skydiver who had been found in the garden at a residence in Mission Beach,” said Queensland Ambulance Service’s Neil Noble.
“Shortly thereafter we received another report of another two skydivers that’d been found close by.”
An unnamed eyewitness told the Cairns Post newspaper the mood in the town was somber as residents came to terms with what had happened.
“I didn’t see anyone near them, but they were at a fairly high altitude so maybe a collision happened further up,” he said.
“You could see one chute was tangled and it wasn’t opening.
“I was just watching him in free fall until he went behind the trees, and that was the last I saw.”
Skydive Australia said operations at Mission Beach had been suspended while investigations were underway.
Located midway between Cairns and Townsville, Mission Beach, a gateway to Dunk Island, is popular with backpackers making their way down the Queensland state coast.


NATO’s Rutte says Arctic talks with Trump will focus on keeping Russia, China out

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NATO’s Rutte says Arctic talks with Trump will focus on keeping Russia, China out

  • Donald Trump has repeatedly said he wanted to acquire Greenland, citing ‌national security
  • US President’s ambitions have put strain on the NATO ⁠alliance
DAVOS, Switzerland: NATO Secretary Mark Rutte said on Thursday that he and US President Trump had discussed in Davos how the transatlantic alliance should best defend the Arctic against Russia and China.
Trump has repeatedly said he wanted to acquire Greenland, citing ‌national security, though ‌on Wednesday ‌he ⁠ruled out ‌using force and suggested a deal was in sight to end the dispute over the Danish overseas territory following talks with Rutte.
Trump’s ambitions have put strain on the NATO ⁠alliance.
Rutte said he had a “very good discussion” ‌with Trump on how NATO ‍allies can ‍work collectively to ensure Arctic ‍security, including not just Greenland but the seven NATO nations with land in the Arctic.
Further talks would build on the Washington meeting last week between the United States and delegations from ⁠Denmark and Greenland. “One workstream coming out of yesterday ... is to make sure when it comes to Greenland, particularly, that we ensure that the Chinese and the Russians will not gain access to the Greenland economy (or) militarily to Greenland,” Rutte told a panel at the World Economic Forum.