
Tram derails and crashes into pizzeria in Sweden, injuring several
COPENHAGEN, June 20 (Reuters) - A tram derailed and crashed into a pizzeria in southwestern Sweden late on Thursday, injuring several people, Swedish police said.
It was not immediately clear how many had been injured, Swedish police said in a statement.
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The Independent
5 hours ago
- The Independent
Body found in search for missing teenager Mylo Capilla
A body has been found during the search for a missing 13-year-old boy believed to have entered the River Tees. Mylo Capilla was last seen at around 9pm on Thursday in an area known as the Muddies in Ingleby Barwick, Teesside. Cleveland Police launched a major search operation on Friday as dozens of emergency service personnel joined the efforts to find the missing teenager. A force spokesman confirmed in a statement published on Friday evening that the body of a boy has been found. Mylo's parents have been informed by the police as investigations continue into the death. A spokesperson for the force said: 'Very sadly, police and partner agencies searching the river for 13-year-old Mylo Capilla at Ingleby Barwick have found the body of a boy. 'Whilst formal identification has yet to take place, Mylo's parents have been informed and they continue to be supported by specially trained officers. 'All our thoughts are with Mylo's family and friends as well as with the wider community at this extremely difficult time.' Cleveland Police previously said Mylo was believed to have gone with his friend to the river near to Ramsey Gardens and entered the water. More than 12 hours after the alarm was raised, the police helicopter continued to fly over a short span of the Tees. A police cordon was in place in Ramsey Gardens, around 200 metres from the river, to keep the public away from the search area. Cleveland Fire and Rescue Service was also on the scene. One local said the Muddies was a large area stretching along the riverbank and was a known place for children and young people to play.


Times
7 hours ago
- Times
Oresund Bridge is £58 to cross. Is the toll just daylight robbery?
For four centuries the Oresund, a strait between Denmark and Sweden that is the gateway to the Baltic Sea, was a geopolitical chokepoint. The Danish kings would routinely top up their treasury by extorting transit fees from passing ships. In 1658 the Swedes got their own back by crossing the frozen waters and surrounding Copenhagen. Urban legend holds that there is still a law on Denmark's statute books that permits loyal Danes to take up a cudgel and bash any Swede attempting to traverse the ice. The sound last became passable on foot in 1996 but no heads were staved in. Four years after that, though, Sweden and Denmark opened a five-mile, €2.6 billion bridge across the strait, whose 25th birthday falls on Tuesday. The kings and queens of both countries will mark the occasion by travelling in a convoy from the Swedish side to the Danish one, pausing halfway on the island of Peberholm. The bridge has become a symbol of European integration, all but turning Copenhagen and the Swedish port of Malmo on the other side of the water into a single conurbation. 'There is a before and after the bridge,' said Linus Eriksson, the chief executive of the company that runs it. 'Before the bridge, Malmo was a town in crisis. Even Copenhagen had a tough situation. Both cities had a tough situation with poor growth. Now it's a totally different region economically.' The crossing was also made famous from Tijuana to Bulawayo by The Bridge, a noirish crime drama in which a chilly Swedish detective called Saga Noren and her Danish partner Martin Rohde solved a series of grisly trans-strait murders. Now, however, many commuters who bought into the dream of living in one country and working in the other are complaining of what they regard as a lower-level but higher-volume crime: daylight robbery. • How Swedish gangs are exporting young contract killers across Scandinavia Weeks before the anniversary, the basic price for a one-way car journey across the bridge has been jacked up to 510 Danish kroner, or £58. For the largest vans, it is the equivalent of £218. Research by Sydsvenskan, a regional newspaper in southern Sweden, suggests this is by far the most expensive bridge toll on the planet, costing about twice as much as its nearest rivals in Japan and Canada. Tommy Frandsen, a Danish warehouse manager, is the embodiment of the Oresund ideal. He lives in Staffanstorp, a Swedish town 12 miles from the bridge, and commutes across it every weekday to his workplace on the Danish side. Even though he gets a reduced rate, this now costs him nearly £350 a month, or slightly more than 10 per cent of his salary after tax. 'I feel like it's terrible because they raise the prices every year,' Frandsen said. 'The ferry is not an option. The train is not a possibility because I live out in the country and there's no trains from here.' Aravin Chakravarthi, who is based in Malmo but works in Hedehusene, Denmark, said he could not afford to traverse the bridge by car and was forced to take longer rail journeys instead. 'I don't drive by car because of the bridge toll, even on desperate days when I'm juggling tight schedules to drop off or pick up my two kids,' he said. Although the bridge consortium is jointly owned by the Swedish and Danish states, it is financed with sizeable loans, which have to be paid back. The toll is also linked by law to the cost of the privately operated ferry that runs between Helsingor and Helsingborg further up the strait, to protect the commercial viability of the latter. 'We are state-owned, so we would not be able to cut the price by half because then the commercially operated ferry company would complain or even sue us,' said Eriksson. Despite the vehicle toll, the total number of people crossing the Oresund by car, train or ferry hit a record 38 million last year, equivalent to about 105,000 trips a day. A one-way railway journey between central Copenhagen and Malmo typically costs only £13. Locals' sentimental attachment to the bridge remains largely undiminished. 'It has created love relationships. It has created party culture and university research,' said Niels Paarup-Petersen, a Swedish Centre Party MP from Malmo. 'There are such gains that have actually become a reality because of the bridge.'


BBC News
8 hours ago
- BBC News
Woman in her 70s dies after crash with truck on A316 near Burford
A woman in her 70s was killed when her Range Rover was involved in a crash with a recovery crash at about 15:20 BST on Thursday resulted in the closure of the A361 near Burford, Oxfordshire, but it has since Range Rover's driver, from Oxfordshire, was given emergency medical treatment but she died at the recovery truck's driver, a man in his 20s, who is also from Oxfordshire, was taken to hospital and remains in a serious condition. PC Harry Welch, from Thames Valley Police, asked anyone who saw the crash to contact officers. You can follow BBC Oxfordshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.