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Base jumpers die in Switzerland | |
(35 minutes later) | |
Two Base jumpers, including a British man, have died in Switzerland, police said. | |
Both accidents occurred on Wednesday near Lauterbrunnen in the Alps, which is considered a hub for Base jumping, one of the world’s most dangerous sports. | |
The British victim was a 49-year-old man who jumped from the “High Ultimate” peak at Muerren and crashed into a cliff, police said, adding that he had not yet been identified. | |
He is the second British Base jumper to have died in the last fortnight after David Reader, 25, died when his parachute failed to open on a leap in the French Alps on 7 August. | |
Police in the Swiss canton of Bern said on Thursday that a 30-year-old Italian man jumped from the “Black Line” peak at Stechelberg but lost control of his route and hit a cliff. | |
Italian media identified him as Uli Emanuele. Profiling Emanuele last year, Vice magazine said he had moved to Lauterbrunnen four years previously and worked there as a dishwasher in between practicing his passion. It said he had logged more than 1,900 jumps and had been exclusively using a wingsuit in recent years. | |
Most Base jumpers wear wingsuits, which allow them to fly for miles at speeds of up to 120mph (200kmh) before deploying a parachute. | |
More than 20 people died Base jumping last year, mostly from impact injuries, according to an unofficial count on a website dedicated to the activity. | |
A study published in the medical journal Bandolier in 2007 which compared sports found that Base jumping carried the highest risk of death, with a one in 2,317 chance of dying on each leap (50 times greater than skydiving). | |
Technology has improved since then but a 2013 study in the Wilderness Medical Society journal found that the sport’s rising popularity was leading to more deaths. | |
High-profile fatalities have included that of the American Johnny Strange, who died in the Swiss Alps while attempting a wingsuit jump last October. | |
Perhaps the most prominent wingsuit-related casualty was the August 2013 death of Mark Sutton, the James Bond parachutist from the opening ceremony at the London 2012 Olympics. He was doing a wingsuit jump from a helicopter when he hit a mountain ridge. | |
Swiss police said investigations were continuing into the latest deaths. |
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