Tag: Germany

  • Czech Olympic skier in medically induced coma following brain surgery after downhill fall in Germany

    Czech Olympic skier in medically induced coma following brain surgery after downhill fall in Germany

    Czech skier Tereza Nova, who competed for her country in four Olympic races in 2022, was placed in a medically induced coma after she needed brain surgery on Saturday following a downhill crash in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany.

    Nova was in her final training session on Friday when she crashed on the Kandahar course. 

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    The Czech ski federation said that Nova required surgery to reduce brain swelling, and she “will remain in the medically induced coma as long as deemed necessary by the medical team.”

    Tereza Nova (CZE) competes in the women’s alpine downhill combined during the Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games at Yanqing Alpine Skiing Centre. (Andrew P. Scott-USA Today Sports)

    “We are all thinking of Tereza and wish her a speedy recovery and lots of strength,” the ski federation said on Saturday.

    Nova, 26, participated in four races during the 2022 Beijing Olympics.

    Her best finish was 14th place during the women’s alpine combined event. She also competed in mixed team parallel, where she finished 14th as well, women’s downhill (28th) and women’s Super-G (33rd).

    Nova has also competed in World Cup races since 2019, where she made her debut in November, though she didn’t qualify for the second round of the slalom event in Levi. 

    Tereza Nova on ski mountain

    Tereza Nova (CZE) competes in the alpine skiing-womens alpine combined event during the Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games at Yanqing Alpine Skiing Centre. (Harrison Hill-USA Today Sports)

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    Nova’s international debut came in December 2014, and she would compete in the Junior World Championships in Val di Fassa five years later. 

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • 2 people are killed in a knife attack in Germany. Scholz says there must be consequences

    2 people are killed in a knife attack in Germany. Scholz says there must be consequences

    Two people, including a 2-year-old boy, were killed and three others injured in a stabbing attack in Bavaria on Wednesday. The suspect, a former asylum-seeker who was supposed to be leaving Germany, was arrested.

    Chancellor Olaf Scholz said that authorities must clear up why the suspect was still in the country. He said the attack, a month before a national election in which curbing irregular migration is a major issue, must have consequences.

    ‘RANDOM’ STABBING SPREE AT FESTIVAL IN GERMANY LEAVES 3 DEAD, OTHERS INJURED: REPORT

    The attack occurred just before noon in a park in Aschaffenburg, a city of about 72,000 people. Bavaria’s top security official, Joachim Herrmann, said the assailant attacked the boy, who was part of a group of kindergarten children, with a kitchen knife.

    He said the 2-year-old of Moroccan origin was killed, along with a 41-year-old German man who was passing by and appeared to have intervened to protect the other children. Bavarian officials said two adults and a 2-year-old Syrian girl were injured and taken to a hospital for treatment, and none of their lives were in danger.

    Other passers-by chased the suspect and he was arrested 12 minutes after the attack, Herrmann said.

    Rescue vehicles are seen near a crime scene in Aschaffenburg, Germany, Wednesday, Jan 22, 2025, where two people were killed in a knife attack. (Ralf Hettler/dpa via AP)

    He said the suspect, a 28-year-old Afghan national, had come to authorities’ attention at least three times because of acts of violence. On each occasion, he was sent for psychiatric treatment and later released.

    The suspect is believed to have arrived in Germany in November 2022 and applied for asylum in early 2023, Herrmann said. On Dec. 4, he told authorities that he would leave the country voluntarily and would seek papers from the Afghan consulate. A week later, German authorities formally closed asylum proceedings and told him to leave.

    Police will work over the coming days to identify his motive, Herrmann said, adding that suspicions so far point to his psychiatric illness. A first search of his room at a refugee home found no evidence that he had radical Islamic views, and only turned up medicine that would fit with his psychiatric treatment, he said.

    The attack is politically sensitive a month before Germany’s national election.

    Scholz issued a strongly-worded statement condemning what he called “an incomprehensible act of terror.”

    “I am tired of such acts of violence happening here every few weeks — by perpetrators who came to us to find protection here,” he said. “Mistaken tolerance is inappropriate here. Authorities must clear up at high pressure why the attacker was still in Germany at all.”

    That must lead to “immediate consequences — it is not enough to talk,” Scholz added. He didn’t elaborate.

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    Following a knife attack by an Afghan immigrant in Mannheim in May that left a police officer dead and four more people injured, Scholz vowed that Germany would start deporting criminals from Afghanistan and Syria again. He vowed to step up deportations of rejected asylum-seekers following a knife attack in Solingen in August in which a suspected Islamic extremist from Syria is accused of killing three people.

    At the end of August, Germany deported Afghan nationals to their homeland for the first time since the Taliban returned to power in 2021.