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EMERGENCY

Sweden launches new emergency number

Swedish authorities opened the lines to a new emergency telephone number on Monday, to be used specifically by residents looking for information about emergency situations.

Sweden launches new emergency number

Swedish emergency services operator SOS Alarm has launched a new number – 113 13 – for people to call when in search of information about mishaps and emergencies.

“We’ve already had calls. Both people with real problems and prank calls,” Anders Klarström, spokesman at SOS Alarm told the Dagens Nyheter (DN) newspaper.

The need for a new number comes after it emerged that more than half of the emergency calls made in Sweden were not emergency situations at all, he added.

For actual emergencies, the 112 number is still in place.

The new number is aimed at people who are looking for more information about accidents or problems, such as floods, fires, infrastructure damage, or storms.

Worried Swedes can even use it to check up on problems like smoke coming from a nearby building, SOS wrote on their official website.

Klarström, meanwhile, stressed that the new number shouldn’t put people off ringing 112 in any borderline emergency cases.

“Sweden needs a number for people to get information. But if you’re the least bit unsure, you shouldn’t think twice about calling 112.”

Incidentally, the number 13 is considered by some to be unlucky. People who suffer triskaidekaphobia will actively avoid the number in the hope of escaping bad luck.

It is unclear how many sufferers of triskaidekaphobia live in Sweden, or if the new phone number and its double 13 combination will have any effect on their emergency inquiries.

The Local/og

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TECHNOLOGY

Orange bosses summoned to ministry after phone glitch leaves French emergency services uncontactable

The French government on Thursday summoned the head of the Orange telecom operator after a network outage that left people unable to reach emergency services.

Orange bosses summoned to ministry after phone glitch leaves French emergency services uncontactable
Photo: Martin Bureau/AFP

A person in the western Morbihan region suffering from a heart condition was reported dead after failing to put through an emergency call during the outage which lasted for several hours on Wednesday, Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin said.

While it was not certain that the death was caused directly by long delays in getting through, “what is beyond doubt is that people have told us that they tried calling several times and that they couldn’t get an operator immediately,” he told reporters.

Two people with heart conditions in the overseas territory of La Réunion were also reported dead.

Calling the outage a “serious and unacceptable malfunction”, Darmanin said that Stephane Richard, the CEO of Orange which is France’s biggest telecom company, had been summoned early on Thursday to his ministry “to tell us the current state of play”.

Darmanin reported on Wednesday evening that some emergency call centres “are having difficulty receiving calls due to a technical problem from the operator”.

“Everything is being done to resolve these malfunctions as quickly as possible,” he tweeted.

By Thursday morning the emergency numbers – 17 for police, 15 for ambulance, 18 for firefighters and 112 for all emergencies – were back up and running, although temporary numbers set up overnight were also left in place.

READ ALSO Emergency in France – who to call and what to say

Health Minister Olivier Véran said the breakdown was “obviously due to a maintenance problem” by French telecoms group Orange.

The maintenance carried out “by Orange would have caused fairly random breakdowns, with up to a 30-percent drop in some regions”, Véran told the TF1 channel.

Orange confirmed to AFP that a “technical incident on a router had greatly disrupted VoIP (voice over internet protocol), internet calls in some regions”.

A source close to the case ruled out any kind of “hacking”.

Problems were reported across the country from 6pm, causing havoc for emergency services.

Emergency doctor and head of the Samu-Urgences emergency medical services union François Braun said “people were unable to access the service, calls were not coming through, others were cut off in the middle of a conversation”.

He said that almost all of France’s departments were affected, adding that calls usually peak around 7pm.

“We don’t know what consequences this breakdown will have, it’s too early to say,” he said.

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