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HORSE

Sweden’s 9,000 missing horses baffle experts

Officials plan to investigate why and how 9,000 horses disappear from Sweden each year, with experts suspecting they may be illegally sold to continental food factories.

Sweden's 9,000 missing horses baffle experts

Research carried out by county officials in the south of Sweden and the Hästnäringens nationella stiftelse, HNS (“The Equine Industry Association”) showed an inexplicable gap in the number of horse deaths reported in Sweden.

With a total population of 360,000 horses in Sweden, and a horse living on average 15 years, statistics indicate that around 20,000 horses should die each year, wrote the Svenska Dagbladet newspaper (SvD).

Yet the numbers simply do not add up.

“We can only find 14,000 in the statistics and we’ve left no stone unturned in our search. There’s a gap of between 4,000 and 9,000 horses each year,” Karolina Thorell at the HNS told the paper.

The missing-horses statistic turned out to be the same each year, with the researchers believing that as many as 100,000 horses have vanished since the year 2000.

Thorell offered several explanations. She claimed that the horses may simply be living longer than statistics suggest; that their owners were burying them without official permits; or that the animals were ending up in slaughterhouses outside Sweden.

Mattias Gårdlund of the animal inspection authority in Skåne explained that there was hardly any oversigt of animals being shifted out of Sweden.

He claimed the value of a horse at a Swedish slaughterhouse to be about 2,000 kronor ($315), a price that could be twice as high in Denmark, three times as high in Belgium, and four times as high in Italy.

“There is no financial incentive to do this legally,” he told the paper.

This week, Swedish food company Findus came under fire when their ready-made lasagne meals were found to contain traces of horsemeat – in some instances as much as 90 percent per meal, even though the meat was labelled as beef.

Findus blamed their supplier, Belgium-based Comigel. Since the findings, 20,000 packages of the food have been destroyed.

“As the product was not in line with the information on the package, we can’t do anything else besides throw them away. You can’t give them away,” Henrik Nyberg, Nordic Production Director at Findus, told SvD.

TT/The Local/og

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SKIING

Spain mourns Blanca Fernández Ochoa, the Olympian skier found dead in Madrid’s sierra

The body of former Spanish alpine skimedallist Blanca Fernández Ochoa was found Wednesday in a mountainous area near Madrid after days of searches for her by hundreds of police and volunteers, officials said.

Spain mourns Blanca Fernández Ochoa, the Olympian skier found dead in Madrid's sierra
Archive photo of Blanca Fernández Ochoa during her Olympic career.

The 56-year-old — won a bronze skiing for Spain in the 1992 Winter Games in Albertville, becoming the country's first female Winter Olympic medallist — had been missing since she was last spotted on surveillance video at a shopping centre on August 24th.

Her car was later found at a parking lot near the start of a hiking trail in Cercedilla, a mountainous village near Madrid. The authorities said they are still investigating the cause of her death.

“Solidarity, support and human warmth have been felt these days in the mountains of Cercedilla. Security forces and many volunteers have taken part in the search for Blanca Fernández Ochoa. But nothing could be done. My affection to all her family,” Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez tweeted.

Hundreds of police, firefighters, forest rangers and volunteers, backed by helicopters, drones and tracking dogs, had taken part in the search for Fernández Ochoa.

Her family only alerted the authorities about her disappearance on August 29th because they said it was not unusual for her to go on hikes in the area, even without her phone, according to Spanish media reports.

Police on Saturday issued an appeal on social media for help from the public in locating Fernández Ochoa along with a picture of her, which drew media attention to her disappearance.

She was well known in Spain, where she had taken part in several TV reality shows after retiring from sports.

Her older brother, Francisco Fernández Ochoa, won a gold medal for skiing in the 1972 Winter Olympics in Japan. He is the first and only Spaniard to have won a gold medal at the Winter Olympics.   

There is a statue in his honour in Cercedilla.   

Until 2018 the brother and sister were the only Spaniards to have won medals at a Winter Olympics.

“It is a very sad day for Spanish sports,” Spain's secretary of state for sports, Maria Jose Rienda, said in a statement.

READ ALSO: Snowboarder from Ceuta wins Olympic medal for Spain

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