
Skiers warned as 10 die on slopes
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AVALANCHES CLAIM EIGHT PEOPLE IN A WEEK AND PREFECTURE WARNS ON DANGERS OF SKIING OFF-PISTE SKIERS have been warned about the dangers of skiing off-piste after a series of accidents in the
Alps that have seen 10 people killed – including eight in avalanches. Two off-piste skiers died in the Queyras Massif on Saturday and a gendarme ski instructor was killed during a training
exercise when he fell into a crevasse on Mont Blanc. The deaths followed a week that saw four people killed by an avalanche at Crevoux in Hautes-Alpes and two at Tignes. In Saturday’s
accident a party of three skiers, a couple in their 50s and a 75-year-old friend, were swept away after a 30cm slab of snow broke off as they passed. All three were carried 600m downhill and
buried under the snow. They had been wearing avalanche beacons and were quickly found – but the older man and the woman could not be revived. The Hautes-Alpes prefecture has warned skiers
to take care when skiing off-piste and on Saturday the avalanche risk in Pelvoux and Champsaur was said to be four on a scale of five, while on other massifs in the Alpes de Sud the risk is
still standing today at 3/5. Last Tuesday four Breton skiers were killed in an avalanche at Crévoux (Hautes-Alpes). Only their guide managed to escape. On Wednesday two skiers, a guide and a
client, were swept 300m to their deaths in an avalanche at Tignes, Savoie. On Thursday a cross-country skier died when he crashed into a tree. Since the start of winter 22 people have been
killed in France in avalanches – the same total as for the whole of last season.