Ski lift accident leaves 30 injured at Spanish resort in the Pyrenees

A ski lift collapsed at a resort in the Spanish region of Aragon on Saturday, injuring dozens of people, nine of them very seriously and eight seriously, the regional government said. (X/@Weathermonitors)
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Updated 18 January 2025
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Ski lift accident leaves 30 injured at Spanish resort in the Pyrenees

  • Regional emergency services said that 10 people needed to be treated in hospitals
  • State TV channel TVE reported that around 80 people were trapped on the chairlifts

BARCELONA: At least 30 people have been injured in a ski lift accident at the Spanish resort of Astún, in the Pyrenees mountain range, emergency services for Spain’s northern Aragon region said Saturday.
Regional emergency services said that 10 people needed to be treated in hospitals, including two who were seriously injured.
State TV channel TVE reported that around 80 people were trapped on the chairlifts in the immediate aftermath.
“It’s like a cable has come off, the chairs have bounced and people have been thrown off,” one witness told TVE.

Fernando Beltrán, a representative of Spain’s government in Aragon, later posted on X that “all the skiers affected by the accident” have been evacuated and those who were injured were receiving medical treatment.
The cause of the incident is unknown.
Several helicopters were deployed to the area to rescue those trapped and transfer the injured to nearby hospitals.
Social media images and video appeared to show a number of people lying on the snow beneath the ski lift.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said he was “shocked” by the news of the accident, expressing his closeness to the injured and their families.
The ski resort said on X that it was “working with emergency services” and that its management expressed “consternation and support for those affected” by the incident.


UK drops plans for mandatory digital ID for workers in latest U-turn, media reports

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UK drops plans for mandatory digital ID for workers in latest U-turn, media reports

  • The ‌digital ID would be held ‌on ⁠people’s mobile ​phones, the government ‌said
  • The plan drew criticism from political opponents and warning it could infringe on civil liberties

LONDON: Britain is set to drop plans to make it mandatory for workers to hold a digital identity document, The Times newspaper, the BBC and ​other media reported on Tuesday, potentially marking another policy U-turn for the Labour government.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced in September last year that his government would require every employee to hold a digital ID in an attempt to tackle illegal migration and reduce the threat from the populist Reform UK party.
The government ‌said the ‌digital ID would be held ‌on ⁠people’s mobile ​phones ‌and become a mandatory part of checks employers must make when hiring staff.
The plan drew criticism from political opponents, with some arguing it would not deter illegal migration and others warning it could infringe on civil liberties.
The Times said the government abandoned the plan amid concerns ⁠it could undermine public trust in the scheme, noting that when introduced ‌in 2029, digital IDs would ‍be optional rather than mandatory.
Other ‍forms of documentation, such as an electronic visa ‍or passport, would still be valid, The Times said.
“We are committed to mandatory digital right to work checks,” a government spokesperson said. “We have always been clear that details on the ​digital ID scheme will be set out following a full public consultation which will launch ⁠shortly.”
The spokesperson said current checks rely on a “hodgepodge” of paper-based systems, with no record of whether they were ever carried out, leaving the process open to fraud and abuse.
If plans for a mandatory digital ID are dropped, it would mark another policy climbdown for Starmer.
In December, the government scaled back a plan to raise more tax from farmers, months after it backed down on cuts to welfare spending and scaled back a ‌proposal to reduce subsidies on energy bills for the elderly.