German biathlete confirmed dead after accident on Pakistan mountain
German double biathlon champion Laura Dahlmeier was confirmed dead on Wednesday after she was seriously injured by a rockfall on a Pakistani mountain.The dangerous nature of the site made rescue efforts “impossible”, her agency said in a statement issued on Wednesday, which confirmed her death.”Rescue efforts to recover her failed and the operation was suspended,” the statement continued. The accident happened around midday on Monday at an altitude of 5,700 metres (18,700 feet) on Laila Peak in the Karakoram range, according to a statement from her team on her official social media pages.Dahlmeier’s climbing partner was able to sound the alarm after reaching safety.”It was determined that a helicopter rescue is not possible,” Areeb Ahmed Mukhtar, a senior local official in Ghanche district, where the more than 6,000 metre mountain is located, told AFP earlier on Wednesday.”The conditions at the altitude where she was injured are extremely challenging,” he added.Shipton Trek & Tours Pakistan, which organised the expedition, confirmed the ground rescue by a team of four that includes three Americans and a German mountaineer.The 31-year-old was “hit by falling rocks,” her team said on Tuesday, adding no one had yet been able to reach her due to the danger of further rockfalls and the site’s “remoteness”.Earlier, a helicopter managed to fly over the location and rescuers saw that “the experienced mountaineer is at least seriously injured”, it said.”No signs of life were detected.”Muhammad Ali, a local disaster management official, told AFP that weather conditions have been “extremely harsh” in the region for the past week, with rain, strong winds and thick clouds.Dahlmeier, an experienced mountaineer, had been in the region since the end of June and had already ascended the Great Trango Tower.German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier issued a statement on Wednesday calling Dahlmeier “an ambassador for our country around the world (and) a role model for peaceful, joyful, and fair coexistence across borders.”She won seven world championship gold medals, and at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang she became the first female biathlete to win both the sprint and the pursuit at the same Games.Dahlmeier retired from professional competition in 2019 at the age of 25.She went on to become a commentator on biathlon events for German broadcaster ZDF, and also took up mountaineering.She was a certified mountain and ski guide and an active member of the mountain rescue, according to her team.
Le Portugal et l’Espagne mobilisés face aux feux de forêt
Des étendues de forêts calcinées, encore parcourues par des flammes: les pompiers portugais et espagnols restent mercredi en alerte maximale pour tenter de contenir les feux de forêt qui ravagent la péninsule ibérique depuis plusieurs jours. Au Portugal, sept feux majeurs sont encore actifs dans le nord et le centre du pays après une accalmie observée mercredi matin, mobilisant plus de 2.000 pompiers appuyés par une vingtaine d’aéronefs, selon un dernier bilan de la protection civile. L’Espagne, également touchée par cette vague d’incendies, lutte contre deux foyers majeurs dans les provinces d’Avila et de Caceres (centre-ouest).Au Portugal, les incendies du nord du pays suscitent les plus vives inquiétudes en raison des températures élevées et du vent attendu dans l’après-midi.A Ponte da Barca, où un incendie sévit depuis samedi soir, le maire Augusto Marinho a demandé des renforts pour protéger le village de Germil, menacé d’encerclement par les flammes. “Nous essayons de maîtriser la situation mais cet après-midi la météo pourrait nous réserver quelques mauvaises surprises”, a déclaré le commandant de la protection civile Marco Domingues.- Appel à la vigilance -L’incendie d’Arouca (nord), déclenché lundi après-midi, mobilise le plus gros dispositif: quelque 780 pompiers, aidés de 267 véhicules et 8 aéronefs.Face à l’avancée des flammes, les habitants d’un village près de Melres (nord) ont connu mardi des moments éprouvants. “C’est terrible! L’année dernière cela avait déjà brûlé de l’autre côté, c’était de la folie … et maintenant ici”, a confié à l’AFP Maria Da Conceiçao, 64 ans.Sous un ciel obscurci par une épaisse fumée noire, et face à la progression des flammes, certains habitants ont tenté de défendre leurs biens avec des tuyaux d’arrosage en attendant l’arrivée des secours.De l’autre côté de la frontière, en Espagne, à Caminomorisco, dans la province de Caceres (ouest) un incendie a déjà détruit 2.500 hectares. Six hameaux ont été évacués à titre préventif et plusieurs routes ont été coupées. L’évolution de ce foyer dépendra du vent attendu au fil de la journée, ont indiqué les autorités régionales.Dans la province voisine d’Avila, un autre feu, qui s’est déclaré lundi près de Cuevas del Valle, a conduit au confinement du village d’El Arenal. Face au risque extrême, les autorités portugaises et espagnoles ont appelé les populations à la plus grande vigilance.- Météo défavorable -La journée de mercredi s’annonce difficile en raison de conditions météorologiques défavorables, avec des vents soutenus et des températures élevées pouvant atteindre 40°C dans le centre du Portugal.La quasi totalité du territoire portugais se trouve en état d’alerte, en raison d’un risque incendie “maximal, très élevé ou élevé”, selon les prévisions de l’Institut portugais de la mer et de l’atmosphère (IPMA).Face à ces conditions, le Portugal avait décidé en début de semaine de renforcer son dispositif de lutte contre les feux de forêt.Le gouvernement portugais a assuré mercredi que le gouvernement allait renforcer les moyens aériens. A partir du mois d’août, le pays espère disposer d’un total de 76 appareils pour lutter contre les incendies, a précisé le secrétaire d’Etat à la Protection civile Rui Rocha. Après les incendies meurtriers de 2017, qui ont fait plus d’une centaine de morts, le Portugal a décuplé l’investissement dans la prévention et doublé son budget de lutte contre les feux de forêt.D’après des données encore provisoire de l’Institut des forêts (ICNF), plus de 29.000 hectares sont déjà partis en fumée depuis le début de l’année au Portugal, qui est confronté chaque été à des feux destructeurs. Les experts considèrent que la multiplication des vagues de chaleur, sont des conséquences du changement climatique.La péninsule ibérique est fortement frappée, avec des canicules et sécheresses qui favorisent les feux de forêt.
Stocks diverge, dollar slips before tech earnings, Fed decision
Stock markets diverged on Wednesday and the dollar slid further from recent highs as investors awaited earnings from US tech giants and the latest interest-rate call from the Federal Reserve.Market watchers also kept tabs on China-US developments after the two countries agreed further talks to extend their tariffs truce.”The Fed isn’t expected to change rates but the market will analyse the accompanying commentary for signals on what could happen next,” said Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell.Following Wednesday’s update “the central bank will certainly be watching (US) jobs data on Friday like a hawk, and that result will feed into its future monetary policy decisions”, Mould added.”All the while, we’ve got four of the Magnificent Seven mega-cap US tech stocks reporting over the next two days. They have the power to move markets and any signs of weakness could damage investor sentiment.After Asia’s major stock markets closed mixed, London was down slightly around midday.But Paris and Frankfurt climbed as official data showed the eurozone economy unexpectedly expanded in the second quarter, which preceded a weekend tariffs deal between the US and the EU, which had also bolstered sentiment.After a deal was also reached with Japan over the past week, focus has been on negotiations between Washington and Beijing to extend an agreement to lower eye-watering levies that threatened the world’s largest economies.The two-day meeting in Stockholm ended without a resolution but with the US team voicing optimism they could announce a second 90-day truce.The general feeling is that the moratorium will be extended but there remains some nervousness, with many other countries still to reach agreements ahead of Trump’s August 1 deadline.Among the countries still to reach a deal are Brazil, which faces 50 percent tariffs, India and South Korea.Trump said Tuesday that New Delhi could face a rate of 20 to 25 percent, adding: “India has been a good friend, but India has charged basically more tariffs than almost any other country. You just can’t do that.”Major earnings releases from tech titans Meta and Microsoft are due Wednesday, with Amazon and Apple coming Thursday.As well as the results, focus will be on the firms’ forecasts in light of Trump’s tariffs and their colossal investments in artificial intelligence.In London, shares in British bank HSBC and military equipment maker BAE Systems dropped around 2.5 percent following mixed earnings updates Wednesday.Oil prices fell, having rallied Tuesday after Trump reiterated his warning of new sanctions on Russia, a major energy power, unless it reaches a truce deal with Ukraine.- Key figures at around 1100 GMT -London – FTSE 100: DOWN 0.3 percent at 9,112.42 pointsParis – CAC 40: UP 0.5 percent at 7,896.33 Frankfurt – DAX: UP 0.2 percent at 24,261.10Tokyo – Nikkei 225: DOWN 0.1 percent at 40,654.70 (close)Hong Kong – Hang Seng Index: DOWN 1.4 percent at 25,176.93 (close)Shanghai – Composite: UP 0.2 percent at 3,615.72 (close)New York – Dow: DOWN 0.5 percent at 44,632.99 (close)Euro/dollar: DOWN at $1.1540 from $1.1554 on TuesdayPound/dollar: UP at $1.3365 from $1.3357Dollar/yen: DOWN at 148.19 yen from 148.50 yenEuro/pound: DOWN at 86.37 pence from 86.47 penceWest Texas Intermediate: DOWN 1.0 percent at $68.52 per barrelBrent North Sea Crude: DOWN 1.0 percent at $71.80 per barrel


