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Death toll from weekend avalanches in Alps rises to five
by Staff Writers
Grenoble, France (AFP) Feb 22, 2015


Toronto toddler found dead after wandering into frigid night
Ottawa (AFP) Feb 20, 2015 - A three-year-old boy who wandered out into a bitter cold winter night in Toronto barely dressed has been found dead, in a tragic end to a saga that gripped the Canadian city.

Elijah Marsh was filmed by a security camera in the lobby of his grandmother's apartment building around 4:20 am on Thursday, wearing only a diaper, T-shirt and boots as he walked outside where the temperature hovered at minus four degrees Fahrenheit (-20 Celsius) and the wind howled.

His frantic relatives reported him missing three hours later, setting off a massive search involving hundreds of police officers and volunteers, helicopters and live television coverage.

The boy was eventually found curled up in the snow on the side of a house, a few hundred yards (meters) from the apartment building, CBC News reported. He was taken to a hospital, where he died.

The toddler, who often stayed with his grandmother, walked past the route to his daycare, with neighbors speculating that he may have been heading there when he wandered out, The Globe and Mail reported.

"I think every Torontonian will feel the loss," police Chief Bill Blair said after the toddler was pronounced dead.

"I think it'll remind all of us to go home and just hug our kids a little bit more. And I think we all will grieve for that child and for their family and for their community for its loss."

Police later said a second three-year-old boy had been found wandering outside in the cold, naked.

Toronto Police Constable Victor Kwong told AFP the boy had been spotted by a neighbor, and was taken to hospital but is doing fine.

The circumstances surrounding the latest incident are not yet clear, Kwong added.

The weekend death toll in the vacation-packed Alps rose Sunday when a man was killed in an avalanche in France, after four people perished earlier in a snowslide in Switzerland, police said.

A man in his fifties was killed and two of his companions were gravely injured Sunday after an avalanche swept their cross-country skiing party of four away near the Isere town of Saint-Honore, police in Grenoble said.

The fatalities occurred in the Taillefer range of the French Alps at an altitude of 1,700 metres (5,577 feet) in the region crowded with holidaymakers.

According to authorities monitoring avalanche activity in France, Sunday's death brings total fatalities from snowslides in France since the winter began to 28.

On Saturday a group of six Italian cross-country skiers were caught by an avalanche in the Great Saint-Bernard Pass in the Swiss Alps at an altitude of 2,300 metres.

Three members of the group -- women and men all in their fifties -- were killed in the accident, while a fourth victim died of his injuries Sunday.

At least 26 people are known to have died in avalanches this winter in Switzerland.

Following the French slide, authorities in the Haute Savoie department posted a heightened avalanche alert for the region, "taking into account the temporary warming accompanying midday and afternoon rains.

"In the coming days, off-trail activities are not advised: be responsible, think about other people you may be putting in danger by provoking an avalanche, and of rescue workers risking their lives," the statement said.


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WHITE OUT
Snow, ice, cold: Winter piles on in eastern US
Washington (AFP) Feb 17, 2015
Heavy snowfall and glacial temperatures shut down much of the central and eastern United States Tuesday - including the US government - in a new bout of bad weather in this winter of bone-chilling discontent. News reports said four people died - three in Tennessee and one in Kansas - amid treacherous driving conditions overnight, with blowing snow hampering visibility and roads slippery ... read more


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