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Swiss villagers pack up for evacuation over fears of a rockslide
J.Mitchell4 hr ago
GENEVA — Families in a tiny Swiss village were packing up Wednesday after authorities issued an evacuation order with a weekend deadline because of the threat of a possible rockslide from a Alpine mountainside overhead. Authorities in charge of the eastern village of Brienz say they analyzed the potential danger with geology and natural-hazards specialists and recommended the precautionary evacuation by 1 p.m. Sunday, they said in a statement Tuesday. Christian Gartmann, a member of the crisis management board in the town of Albula, which counts Brienz in its jurisdiction, says inhabitants of the village, population 90, were preparing quickly. A similar evacuation took place 18 months ago. ''It has begun, immediately actually. People in the village organized themselves,'' Gartmann said by phone. Authorities advised villagers to take essential items, like computers, winter wear, school and work materials, for up to six months out of town, he said. ''It's not a total moving-out,'' Gartmann said, summarizing the order to locals as ''take everything that you need for the next few months. If you have some cheap ... sofa at home, leave it.'' Temporary lodging out of the village, which sits in between Italian and German-speaking parts of southeastern Switzerland, has already been arranged for about three-quarters of residents, and some were staying nearby with friends or family, he said. The main threat is posed by rocks that are already strewn along the mountainside, not a larger breakage, Gartmann said. Prospects for a controlled explosion to trigger a rockslide to reduce the risk have been ruled out, in part because 300 tons of explosives would be needed, blasting crews would face their own risks, and a detonation could affect a nearby mountain, he said. The only Church of England bishop to publicly demand the resignation of former Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby said Wednesday that his departure wasn't enough to solve the church's ''profound failure'' in safeguarding vulnerable people or ease the trauma suffered by victims of abuse. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Wednesday that he will ask for a vote of confidence on Dec. 16, paving the way for early parliamentary elections in February. He declared his plans during a speech in parliament, a week after his three-party coalition government collapsed. The only Church of England bishop to publicly demand the resignation of former Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby said Wednesday that his departure wasn't enough to solve the church's ''profound failure'' in safeguarding vulnerable people or ease the trauma suffered by victims of abuse.
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