Russian plane makes emergency landing after passenger bomb threat

Police detained the woman after the plane landed at Moscow’s Domodedovo airport, Interfax news agency said. (File/AFP)
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Updated 30 January 2020
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Russian plane makes emergency landing after passenger bomb threat

  • The airline S7 said its plane had been flying to Moscow from Simferopol in Crimea, a region Russia annexed from Ukraine in 2014

MOSCOW: A Russian plane made an emergency landing in Moscow on Thursday after a woman passenger stood up in the aisle and threatened to blow herself up, but police later said no explosive device had been found on her, news agencies reported.

The airline S7 said its plane had been flying to Moscow from Simferopol in Crimea, a region Russia annexed from Ukraine in 2014.

Police detained the woman after the plane landed at Moscow’s Domodedovo airport, Interfax news agency said.

No further information was immediately available.


‘Solar sheep’ help rural Australia go green

Updated 5 sec ago
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‘Solar sheep’ help rural Australia go green

  • The panels have had another surprising side effect: Because the grass is shielded from the elements, it’s of more consistent quality

DUBBO: Australian farmer Tom Warren’s solar panels look like any other — until you spot the dozens of sheep grazing and napping, helping the country transition to green energy and earning him a decent income while doing it.

More than 30,000 solar panels are deployed across approximately 50 hectares at Warren’s farm on the outskirts of Dubbo, around 400 kilometers west of Sydney.

The farmer and landowner has been working with renewables firm Neoen for more than a decade and said he was initially worried the panels would restrict his sheep’s grazing.

It quickly became clear those fears were unfounded.

“Normally they would seek out trees and camp under the trees, but you can see that the sheep are seeking out the shade of the panels,” he told AFP at the farm in Dubbo.

“So, it’s a much better environment for them as well.”

The farm produces about 20 megawatts of power, he said — a “substantial amount” of the energy needs of the local area.

While he can’t disclose how much he earns from the panels, he said he’s taking in much more than he would from just farming.

“The solar farm income is greater than I would ever get off agriculture in this area — regardless of whether I have sheep running under the panels or not,” he said.

The panels have had another surprising side effect: Because the grass is shielded from the elements, it’s of more consistent quality.

That, in turn, has improved the wool produced by the sheep.

“The wool is actually better and cleaner,” Warren said.

“All over, we’ve had about a 15 percent increase in the gross revenue coming from the sheep running under the solar farm.”

Fellow farmer Tony Inder, based around 50 kilometers south in the town of Wellington, agrees.

His flock is much larger — 6,000 sheep grazing on two plots of land covering 4,000 hectares.