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‘A miracle’: German girl found after two days missing in remote woods

In what has been described as “a miracle”, a young girl has been found after surviving two nights of near-freezing temperatures in a remote and mountainous Bavarian forest.

'A miracle': German girl found after two days missing in remote woods
Search teams at the scene in norther Bavaria. Photo: Armin Weigel/dpa

“She is alive, but she is suffering from hypothermia and has been taken to the hospital,” a spokesman for the Bavarian police headquarters said of the missing Julia, an eight-year-old girl from Berlin. 

A Czech forestry worker is reported to have found her after an extensive manhunt in which hundreds of emergency service workers on both sides of the German-Czech border were mobilised to hunt through dense trees and rocks.

Julia went missing in the forests on the border region to the Czech Republic while on a walk with her parents on Sunday in the vicinity of Cherchov mountain.

According to the police, Julia, her brother and a cousin disappeared into the woods and their parents were unable to find them. After they called the emergency services, the two boys were located but no one could find Julia.

Some 1,400 rescue workers from Bavaria and the Czech Republic took part in the search in the area between the towns of Waldmünchen, Furth im Wald and Domazlice. 

The Bavarian Red Cross described it as the largest cross-border search operation that had ever taken place in the region. “The fact that it was possible to find the child is tantamount to a miracle,” the rescue service stated on Facebook.

The helpers were in action for two days and two nights and were supported by 115 search dogs, police helicopters and drones with thermal imaging cameras.

With much of the area impassable due to rocks and crevices as well as dense tree cover, and with temperatures close to freezing at night, police feared a “life-threatening and serious danger.”

As recently as Tuesday morning, authorities worried that her chances of survival were diminishing by the hour.

“We mobilised everything, riot police, dog squads, helicopters with thermal imaging cameras, drones and search teams of the Alpine Task Force. In the end, it was a bit of luck that a Czech forester involved in the search operation found the girl,” said Bavaria’s Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann.

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POLICE

Denmark convicts man over bomb joke at airport

A Danish court on Thursday gave a two-month suspended prison sentence to a 31-year-old Swede for making a joke about a bomb at Copenhagen's airport this summer.

Denmark convicts man over bomb joke at airport

In late July, Pontus Wiklund, a handball coach who was accompanying his team to an international competition, said when asked by an airport agent that
a bag of balls he was checking in contained a bomb.

“We think you must have realised that it is more than likely that if you say the word ‘bomb’ in response to what you have in your bag, it will be perceived as a threat,” the judge told Wiklund, according to broadcaster TV2, which was present at the hearing.

The airport terminal was temporarily evacuated, and the coach arrested. He later apologised on his club’s website.

“I completely lost my judgement for a short time and made a joke about something you really shouldn’t joke about, especially in that place,” he said in a statement.

According to the public prosecutor, the fact that Wiklund was joking, as his lawyer noted, did not constitute a mitigating circumstance.

“This is not something we regard with humour in the Danish legal system,” prosecutor Christian Brynning Petersen told the court.

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