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ST-MORITZ

Boy, 4, in ‘miracle’ train crash escape

A four-year-old boy escaped serious harm when the car he was travelling in flipped upside down onto a railway line and was crushed by an oncoming train in the canton of Graubünden on Wednesday.

Boy, 4, in 'miracle' train crash escape
Photo: Graubünden cantonal police

The boy was in a small black Fiat driven by his mother when the vehicle collided with a 65-kilo deer on a road between the communities of La Punt and Bever (near St. Moritz), cantonal police said.

The vehicle turned upside down and landed on the tracks just as a train from the narrow-gauge Rhaetian Railway (RhB) approached, shortly after 8am.

The 42-year-old woman, a resident of St. Moritz, was able to exit the vehicle but was unable to get her son out, police said.

She tried to get the attention of the train driver, who braked but was unable to prevent a collision.

The car was tossed off the tracks and landed on its wheels but the boy survived with just minor bruises, cantonal police said.

The woman and the train driver were treated for shock while the eight passengers on the train were uninjured, according to a police report.
 
The deer was killed on impact.

The train locomotive derailed, while the car was a write-off.

The accident disrupted traffic on the RhB rail line for several hours during which replacement buses were put in service between Zuoz and Samedan.
 
“It was only by a miracle that nothing happened to my grandson,” the grandmother of the four-year-old told the 20 Minuten newspaper.

The newspaper quoted a witness describing how the mother had tried to stop the train.

“You could only watch as the train crushed the car with her son in it.”

The child apparently survived solely because he was sitting in the back seat of the car — the only part of the vehicle that remained intact after the crash.

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ST-MORITZ

Whisky sold for $10,000 a shot at Swiss bar proven to be fake

A shot of Macallan whisky purportedly made in 1878 that a Chinese man paid $10,000 for at a Swiss hotel was actually distilled between 1970 and 1972.

Whisky sold for $10,000 a shot at Swiss bar proven to be fake
The whisky in question. Photo: Hotel Waldhaus am See/AFP

The forgery was discovered after Scottish whisky experts travelled to Switzerland to conduct tests, 20 Minuten reported.

It finally lays to rest the speculation over the malt’s authenticity that arose when the story broke in August.

It began when a young Chinese customer entered the Devil's Place Whisky Bar at the luxury Waldhaus Hotel in St Moritz, northeastern Switzerland, and expressed particular interest in rare Macallans.

The bar, which has a whisky collection mentioned in the Guinness Book ofWorld Records, had 47 options, ranging from seven francs to 10,000 francs per glass.

The customer chose the bottle marked as an 1878 vintage, which went for 9,999 francs ($10,000) for a two-centilitre measure.

According to the online news site, specialists at Rare Whisky 101, who regularly serve as consultants at whisky auctions, established that the bottle's label was a fake.

They said carbon dating had shown that the malt had actually been distilled between 1970 and 1972.

After discovering the forgery, the proprietor of the Waldhaus, Sandro Bernasconi, travelled to Beijing to apologize to the customer and refund him, the paper said.

“It is customary in China to admit your faults,” 20 Minuten quoted him as saying.

Bernasconi said it was also important to show that “the Swiss are honest people and do not engage in scams”.

There were obviously no hard feelings, as the two men then went out for dinner and had a discussion about whiskies, the website said.

The Chinese man asked to see the results and said he appreciated Bernasconi’s honesty.

The site published a photo of the two men holding a symbolic voucher valued at 9,999 Swiss francs, dated October 2017.

Bernasconi said the bottle with the fake label was bought 25 years ago by his father who previously ran the hotel.

“This whole time, we never doubted that the bottle was an original,” Bernasconi told 20 Minuten.