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A child has described the “horrific” moment the cable car line snapped in Pakistan, leaving eight people dangling over a 274m (900ft) river canyon for more than 15 hours.

All eight – seven youngsters, aged between 11 and 15, and their teacher – became trapped during the incident which took place as they were on their way to school.

Two of the children were rescued in the daytime by army commandos using helicopters before the rest were also saved one by one during an even riskier night-time operation.

Imran Ahmed, one of the children trapped for hours, said: “When the cable car [was] stuck in between it was [a] very horrific moment.

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Rescuer pulls himself to cable car

“Everyone was so scared. We were thinking that our time has come, we were think[ing] either we survived or not.

“I never ever again [want to] sit in a cable car. I will prefer to go by foot. We really need roads for connectivity.”

Other schoolchildren rescued from the broken cable car said they also repeatedly feared death was imminent during the 16-hour ordeal.

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Osama Sharif, one of those rescued, said: “I had heard stories about miracles, but I saw a miraculous rescue happening with my own eyes.”

The 15-year-old had been heading to school to receive the results of his final exams, when the cable snapped.

Children are rescued from the stricken cable car. Pic: Rescue 1122 Hazara
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Children are rescued from the stricken cable car. Pic: Rescue 1122 Hazara

“We suddenly felt a jolt, and it all happened so suddenly that we thought all of us are going to die,” he said in a telephone interview.

Some of those on board the cable car started making calls on their mobile phones, while worried parents tried to reassure the children.

“They were telling us ‘Don’t worry, help is coming’,” said Osama.

After several hours, the children then saw helicopters flying nearby.

Thousands of people turned out to watch the risky rescue operation on Tuesday.

A video showed a rope lowering from a helicopter swaying wildly as a child, secured by a harness, was pulled up.

Children receive first aid after they were rescued from the stranded chairlift, in Battagram, Pakistan 
Pic:Rescue 1122/Reuters
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Children receive first aid after they were rescued from the stranded chairlift. Pic: Rescue 1122/Reuters

One of the boys rescued from the cable car

In fact, the aircraft added an element of danger. The air currents churned up by their whirling blades risked weakening the only cable preventing the cable car from crashing to the bottom of the river canyon.

“We cried, and tears were in our eyes, as we feared the cable car will go down,” Osama said.

Thousands of people turned out to watch the risky rescue operation, with video footage capturing a rope lowering from a helicopter swaying wildly as a child, secured by a harness, was pulled up.

The aircraft actually added an element of danger, as the air currents churned up by their whirling blades risked weakening the only cable preventing the cable car from crashing to the bottom of the river canyon.

When helicopters were no longer able to fly after sunset, rescuers shifted tactics.

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A makeshift chairlift was used to approach the cable car using the one cable that was still intact, local police chief Nazir Ahmed said.

Chants of “God is great” could be heard as the chairlift was lowered to the ground in the final stage of the operation just before midnight.

The children received oxygen as a precaution before being handed over to their parents, many of whom burst into tears of joy, Mr Ahmed added.

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‘It allows us to do our job’: Ukrainian artillery team buoyed by fresh ammunition after costly wait on frontline

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'It allows us to do our job': Ukrainian artillery team buoyed by fresh ammunition after costly wait on frontline

Sat in a makeshift shelter on the outskirts of a frontline town in eastern Ukraine, the soldier – callsign “Zaur” – shared some rare, good news: new ammunition appeared to be arriving.

He did not know the precise details but said fresh supplies started to be delivered about a week or two earlier.

This was making a difference for his artillery team as they fought to defend Chasiv Yar from advancing Russian forces.

Follow latest: Missiles launched at Crimea

“It allows us to do our job, to hold off Russian soldiers, to restrain them, and also to destroy them when they attempt counterattacks,” Zaur said.

Ukrainian troops have been losing ground in the Donbas and now face a reopened front in the northeastern region of Kharkiv as they run short of ammunition and weapons following delays in the delivery of munitions from their allies, in particular the United States.

Even though American weapons are finally arriving to the frontline, the wait has been costly.

A Ukrainian soldier with the callsign 'Zaur' speaks to Deborah Haynes

Zaur described the fight for Chasiv Yar, which has long been a Russian target. “It’s pretty intense. There are battles every day,” he said.

Should the hilltop town fall, it would give the invaders access to higher ground, enabling them to target artillery fire onto a wider area and putting cities in the remaining parts of the Donbas that are still under Ukrainian control at greater risk.

Asked whether Ukraine would manage to fend off the Chasiv Yar attack, the soldier, who commands the artillery unit, said: “We’ll try to hold on as much as possible, and time will tell…

“We’ll try our best… to do what’s necessary to survive.”

A Ukrainian soldier with the callsign 'Zaur' speaks to Deborah Haynes in Chasiv Yar
A Ukrainian soldier with the callsign 'Zaur' speaks to Deborah Haynes in Chasiv Yar

A Sky News team was shown around the artillery position under the cover of patchy woodland, next to some grassy mounds. Booms could be heard from distant fighting.

In a sign of the battle moving closer, soldiers had just finished digging a deep, narrow trench, which ran from the already-sheltered location of their self-propelled artillery gun – a 2S1 Gvozdika that fires 122mm rounds.

The trench had taken three days to dig. It had only been finished on the day we visited the area last week and – the soldiers said – had already been used to shelter from incoming rounds.

Chasiv Yar

Russian troops have been trying to push into Chasiv Yar for the past year after seizing the nearby city of Bakhmut.

In recent weeks, though, they appear to have been edging closer – with a Ukrainian military medical stabilisation point forced to pull back to a city called Kostiantynivka.

Read more:
‘This is just the first wave’: Drones reveal new attack
Putin seizes chance as Ukraine waits for weapons

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Russian soldiers advance in Ukrainian drone footage

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As we looked at the artillery site, there was suddenly an ominous sound.

A powerful rocket – I was not able to see it – was flying overhead.

Over a radio held by a soldier, a voice could be heard saying: “It was coming straight at us, then veered towards a five-storey building. It flew low, damn it.”

Within minutes, we became aware of another danger – a drone.

A Russian drone is seen hovering above a Ukrainian artillery post in Chasiv Yar

One of the troops said he thought it was a Ukrainian drone but from our position, it seemed impossible to be sure.

We were told that the commander thought it best for us to leave.

As we walked – quickly – across some open ground between two patches of tree cover, one of the Sky News team thought they could hear a self-exploding attack drone in flight.

Deborah Haynes and Sky News leave the Ukranian post in Chasiv Yar
A Ukrainian soldier holding a rifle in Chasiv Yar

Again, it was not possible to know for sure what was making the noise, but then came the sound of an explosion, though the impact site was not in the immediate vicinity.

In a final reminder of the battle, as we headed towards our vehicle, it was possible to see a black dot hovering above the trees – yet another drone.

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Man with a knife appeared in my hotel room, woman tells trial of Madeleine McCann suspect

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Man with a knife appeared in my hotel room, woman tells trial of Madeleine McCann suspect

A woman who has accused the prime suspect in the disappearance of Madeleine McCann of rape has described being attacked in her hotel room by a man holding a knife.

In emotional testimony on Wednesday, a woman recounted how a man dressed in black allegedly appeared in her hotel room in Portugal and raped her.

Christian B – whose surname cannot be published due to privacy laws in Germany – is accused of attacking the woman.

He also faces two other counts of rape and two of sexual abuse in his ongoing trial in Braunschweig.

The allegations do not relate to the disappearance of Madeleine McCann.

Speaking in court, the woman described the moment she realised there was a man she did not recognise in her hotel room in the middle of the night.

“I felt a fear that I had never feared before, all the blood drained from my head,” she said.

“I turned to see who called my name, saw a man dressed fully in black, with a knife.”

She had been staying in Praia la Rocha, just along the Portuguese coast from Praia da Luz where Madeleine disappeared from three years later.

During the woman’s testimony, Christian B sat motionless next to his lawyer, staring straight ahead.

The woman described being raped by her attacker who then left her tied up, before escaping out via the balcony.

The police were called and she was taken to hospital by ambulance.

“Only occasionally did they (the police) quickly ask something in English. They didn’t pay much attention to me. I was not in a good headspace,” she told the trial.

Gerry, left, and Kate McCann, present a picture of their missing daughter during a press conference in Berlin in 2007. Pic: AP
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Gerry, left, and Kate McCann, present a picture of their missing daughter during a press conference in Berlin in 2007. Pic: AP

Read more:
Madeleine’s parents mark 17 years since disappearance
Witness in Madeleine investigation ‘dying from cancer’

Other charges facing Christian B include:

  • Beating and sexually assaulting a girl aged at least 14 sometime between December 2000 and April 2006 at his house in Praia da Luz, Portugal
  • Exposing himself to a 10-year-old German girl at a beach in Salema in the district of Faro in Portugal on 7 April 2007
  • Exposing himself to an 11-year-old Portuguese girl at a playground in Bartolomeu de Messines in Portugal on 11 June 2017

Earlier in the trial, Christian B’s lawyer said the defendant “is using his right to remain silent”.

There are no formal pleas in the German legal system, and defendants are not obliged to respond to the charges.

Christian B is currently serving a seven-year prison sentence for the 2005 rape of a 72-year-old in Praia da Luz, the same town where Madeleine disappeared.

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France prisoner escape: Day of blockades in French prisons as inmate called ‘The Fly’ on the run

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France prisoner escape: Day of blockades in French prisons as inmate called 'The Fly' on the run

A suspected drug boss nicknamed “The Fly” is at the centre of police manhunt after escaping from a prison van in France.

Two prison officers were killed and three others seriously wounded when a convoy transporting prisoner Mohamed Amra from court to jail was ambushed at a motorway tollbooth near Rouen in Normandy by gunmen wearing balaclavas.

Mohamed Amra
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Mohamed Amra

Several hundred police officers have been deployed nationwide to find the 30-year-old convict and gunmen. It is unclear how many assailants were involved.

CCTV footage showed a black Peugeot SUV driving into the front of a white van, with other video showing at least two armed men carrying rifles circling the car in flames on the A154 motorway.

French media reports suggested a second car used during the attack was a Sedan – stolen in the town of Pontault-Combault in northern France – which had been following the convoy and together with the SUV trapped the prison van.

The two cars were later found torched a few miles away.

A day of blockades dubbed “Dead Prisons Day” has been announced in jails across France today as prison officer unions respond in anger to Tuesday’s attack.

Local media on Wednesday reported demonstrations outside of prisons across the country – including in the French capital Paris, Rouen, Nice, Grasse, Draguignan and Amiens.

A fire burns as prison staff block the entrance of a detention centre  in Val De Reuil, France. Pic: Reuters
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Wooden pallets are set on fire as prison staff block the entrance of a detention centre in Val De Reuil, France. Pic: Reuters

In Yvelines 130 people blocked a remand centre and set fire to wooden pallets, Le Parisien reported.

Inside, around 15 prison staff went about their everyday jobs – compared with the 40 usually onsite.

In addition, the day’s prisoner transportations and visits were cancelled, according to the newspaper.

Hubert Gratraud, a union representative, said: “There is an awareness of the dangerousness.

“We need resources and training. We need to get as close as possible to the reality on the ground: anything can happen.”

“People were shot at point-blank range, it was a massacre, a butchery,” said Ronan Roudaut, another union official.

A minute’s silence is also planned across the French criminal justice system including prisons and courtrooms at 11am.

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‘Assassination attempt’

Police sources said Amra was involved in international drug dealing, a suspect in a kidnap and murder case in Marseille, and had ties to the city’s powerful “Blacks” gang.

He had recently been sentenced to 18 months for burglary in the suburbs of Evreux, northwest France, reported BFM TV.

The French broadcaster said his nickname was La Mouche – or “The Fly” in English.

A prison source told Le Parisien that Amra tried to saw the bars off his cell a few days ago – with the convict reportedly put in solitary confinement afterwards.

The publication said he is suspected of having ordered an assassination attempt, linked to drugs, targeting a Frenchman in Spain in the summer of 2023.

It added Amra, born in Rouen in northern France, was also re-evaluated as ‘Escort 3’ risk category, making more guards necessary during transportation.

Read more: Who is ‘The Fly’?

Dangerous fugitive’s mum speaks

His mother told French radio network RTL she had no idea her son had planned an escape.

“I went to Baumettes to see him, he was in solitary confinement, I went to [the prison of] Evreux once. He spoke normally, he didn’t show me anything. I don’t understand,” she said.

“They carry him around from right to left, they put him in solitary confinement instead of judging him once and for all.”

She said she “broke down” and “cried” when she found out what had happened.

“It makes me sick. How can lives be taken like that?” she said of the two fatalities.

“I don’t know what’s going on in his head, he’s not talking to me. He’s my son and he doesn’t talk to me about anything,” she added.

Justice Minister Eric Dupond-Moretti said two of the injured officers were in a critical condition.

“Absolutely everything will be done to find the perpetrators of this despicable crime,” he told BFM TV.

“These are people for whom life means nothing. They will be arrested, judged and punished according to the crime they committed.”

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