newsinsightplus.com 2024Kateabusive March 11, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountLiveNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityAsiaChinaIndiaLatam Airlines: Passengers injured after ‘technical’ issue mid-airPublished1 hour agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Latam says the incident involved a Boeing 787 DreamlinerBy Joel GuintoBBC NewsSeveral people were injured on a Latam Airlines flight after a “technical event” caused a “strong movement”. The aircraft “just froze” after a “quick little drop”, one passenger told the New Zealand Herald.Seven passengers and three crew members were taken to hospital after landing in Auckland, the airline said, adding that their injuries were not serious.But emergency services said 12 people were taken to hospital, and one patient was in a serious condition.The Boeing 787 Dreamliner was travelling from Sydney to Auckland when the incident happened. Reports said multiple passengers felt the aircraft drop suddenly mid-flight. This threw some people out of their seats, causing them to hit their heads on the plane’s ceiling. “Latam deeply regrets any inconvenience and discomfort this situation may have caused its passengers, and reiterates its commitment to safety as a priority within the framework of its operational standards,” the airline said in a statement.Emergency response teams have been deployed to the airport. They said they had “assessed and treated approximately” 50 patients so far. Related TopicsAviation accidents and incidentsAsiaNew ZealandMore on this storyIndonesian pilots both fall asleep mid-flightPublished4 hours agoWatch: United Airlines plane loses tyre during take-offPublished3 days agoCockpit window crack forces ANA Boeing to turn backPublished13 JanuaryMid-flight blowout a big problem for BoeingPublished8 JanuaryTop StoriesPalace faces questions as news agencies withdraw Kate’s Mother’s Day imagePublished45 minutes agoLive. Oscars 2024: Oppenheimer sweeps awards with best picture and actor winsThe outfits: Best actress Emma Stone and others show off classic stylesPublished6 hours agoFeaturesSeven of the best moments from the OscarsBarbie, Oppenheimer & a wardrobe mishap? The Oscars in 60 seconds. VideoBarbie, Oppenheimer & a wardrobe mishap? The Oscars in 60 secondsThe full list of winners at the Oscars 2024Kate picture heats up rumours instead of quelling public curiosityMy abusive ex-boyfriend was given a verbal warning’Town Halls’ woke jobs’ and ‘Palace’s doctored photo’Geoff Norcott: Should my son bother going to uni?Listen: Oscars Newscast Special. AudioListen: Oscars Newscast SpecialAttributionSoundsIs Europe doing enough to help Ukraine?Elsewhere on the BBCPractical, passionate and hilarious conversationsJoanna Lumley and Roger Allam return with their award-winning comedy playing a long-married coupleAttributionSounds’I will lie on my deathbed wishing I’d done more’Former spin doctor Alastair Campbell on what he’s learned from his life so farAttributionSoundsHow accurate are fitness trackers?Greg Foot gets sweaty in the name of science to find out!AttributionSoundsFrom iron age roundhouses to Victorian mansions…Rachel Hurdley uncovers what walls tell us about how we liveAttributionSoundsMost Read1Palace faces questions over Kate image2Buyers mis-sold caravans as full-time homes3Seven of the best moments from the Oscars4Oscars red carpet fashion: Stars turn on the style5Bodies of five skiers found in Swiss Alps6Australian teen pleads guilty to UK woman’s murder7’Town Halls’ woke jobs’ and ‘Palace’s doctored photo’8’HMRC gave me £49,000 relief, but wants it back’9Indonesian pilots both fall asleep mid-flight10Brianna’s mother meets mum of daughter’s killer [ad_1] Passengers on the flight from Sydney to Auckland reported experiencing a “quick little drop”. Continue reading
newsinsightplus.com 2024Kateabusive March 11, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountLiveNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityAsiaChinaIndiaLatam Airlines: Passengers injured after ‘technical’ issue mid-airPublished1 hour agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Latam says the incident involved a Boeing 787 DreamlinerBy Joel GuintoBBC NewsSeveral people were injured on a Latam Airlines flight after a “technical event” caused a “strong movement”. The aircraft “just froze” after a “quick little drop”, one passenger told the New Zealand Herald.Seven passengers and three crew members were taken to hospital after landing in Auckland, the airline said, adding that their injuries were not serious.But emergency services said 12 people were taken to hospital, and one patient was in a serious condition.The Boeing 787 Dreamliner was travelling from Sydney to Auckland when the incident happened. Reports said multiple passengers felt the aircraft drop suddenly mid-flight. This threw some people out of their seats, causing them to hit their heads on the plane’s ceiling. “Latam deeply regrets any inconvenience and discomfort this situation may have caused its passengers, and reiterates its commitment to safety as a priority within the framework of its operational standards,” the airline said in a statement.Emergency response teams have been deployed to the airport. They said they had “assessed and treated approximately” 50 patients so far. Related TopicsAviation accidents and incidentsAsiaNew ZealandMore on this storyIndonesian pilots both fall asleep mid-flightPublished4 hours agoWatch: United Airlines plane loses tyre during take-offPublished3 days agoCockpit window crack forces ANA Boeing to turn backPublished13 JanuaryMid-flight blowout a big problem for BoeingPublished8 JanuaryTop StoriesPalace faces questions as news agencies withdraw Kate’s Mother’s Day imagePublished45 minutes agoLive. Oscars 2024: Oppenheimer sweeps awards with best picture and actor winsThe outfits: Best actress Emma Stone and others show off classic stylesPublished6 hours agoFeaturesSeven of the best moments from the OscarsBarbie, Oppenheimer & a wardrobe mishap? The Oscars in 60 seconds. VideoBarbie, Oppenheimer & a wardrobe mishap? The Oscars in 60 secondsThe full list of winners at the Oscars 2024Kate picture heats up rumours instead of quelling public curiosityMy abusive ex-boyfriend was given a verbal warning’Town Halls’ woke jobs’ and ‘Palace’s doctored photo’Geoff Norcott: Should my son bother going to uni?Listen: Oscars Newscast Special. AudioListen: Oscars Newscast SpecialAttributionSoundsIs Europe doing enough to help Ukraine?Elsewhere on the BBCPractical, passionate and hilarious conversationsJoanna Lumley and Roger Allam return with their award-winning comedy playing a long-married coupleAttributionSounds’I will lie on my deathbed wishing I’d done more’Former spin doctor Alastair Campbell on what he’s learned from his life so farAttributionSoundsHow accurate are fitness trackers?Greg Foot gets sweaty in the name of science to find out!AttributionSoundsFrom iron age roundhouses to Victorian mansions…Rachel Hurdley uncovers what walls tell us about how we liveAttributionSoundsMost Read1Palace faces questions over Kate image2Buyers mis-sold caravans as full-time homes3Seven of the best moments from the Oscars4Oscars red carpet fashion: Stars turn on the style5Bodies of five skiers found in Swiss Alps6Australian teen pleads guilty to UK woman’s murder7’Town Halls’ woke jobs’ and ‘Palace’s doctored photo’8’HMRC gave me £49,000 relief, but wants it back’9Indonesian pilots both fall asleep mid-flight10Brianna’s mother meets mum of daughter’s killer [ad_1] Passengers on the flight from Sydney to Auckland reported experiencing a “quick little drop”. Continue reading
newsinsightplus.com 1980sAttributionSoundsBig2019.Tourism March 1, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountLiveNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityAsiaChinaIndiaWhite Island volcano: Tour operators ordered to pay millions to victimsPublished47 minutes agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage source, EPAImage caption, 22 people died in 2019 when the White Island volcano eruptedBy Frances MaoBBC NewsA New Zealand court has ordered NZ$10m (£4.8m; $6m) in compensation to the victims of the White Island volcano disaster, where 22 people died.In December 2019, 47 people were touring the volcano when it erupted, killing nearly half of the group and gravely injuring everyone else.The firms which owned the island and operated tours were found guilty last year of negligence and safety breaches.Their failure to provide proper checks had ruined many lives, the court said.The volcano had been showing signs of heightened activity in the weeks leading up to the eruption but operators ignored these, the court said.On Friday, the Auckland District Court ordered the company which owned the island, Whakaari Management Limited, to pay NZ$4.57m in damages to victims.Whakaari Management – named after the Maori name for the island – licenced tour groups to visit the volcano.The court also ordered White Island Tours, the company which had brought the tourists to the island for a walking tour, to pay NZ$4.68m in reparations. Three other tour companies, Volcanic Air Safaris, Aerius Limited and Kahu NZ Limited, were also ordered to pay damages. The privately owned volcano that is always activeSeventeen of the tourists who died were from Australia, with the others from the US, New Zealand and Germany. Affected visitors on the day had also come the UK, China and Malaysia.Judge Evangelos Thomas said in his judgement on Friday that the compensation was “no more than a token recognition” of the victims’ suffering. Families were broken after the death of loved ones, he acknowledged. Many of the survivors suffered terrible burns and were still enduring a painful toll.”The treatment was often painful, arduous, disheartening. For many it remains ongoing,” he said. “Many people grapple with disfigurement of one kind or another. It’s not just simply the physical injury that has caused such harm… the emotional consequences deepen the suffering. We acknowledge that harm.”Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, A 2021 memorial in the New Zealand town of Whakatane to the tourists affected in the disasterPayments will be divided among the victims, with greater amounts to the families of the 22 people who were killed.In testimonies earlier this week, relatives of those who died told the court the “grief never goes away”.The mother of Hayden Marshall-Inman, a 40-year-old tour guide killed in the eruption, said: “When Hayds died on White Island, a part of me died. My heart carries the loss of him day and night.”The owners of the island, Whakaari Management, were also fined NZ$978,000 for breaching workplace safety laws.The firm’s owners previously faced individual criminal prosecutions over the deaths, but the charges were dropped last year.The disaster prompted the most extensive and complex investigation ever undertaken by WorkSafe NZ, which was also criticised for failing to monitor activities on the island between 2014 and 2019.Tourism activities on White Island have not resumed since the eruption.Some of the tourists who bought their tour ticket to Whakaari through Royal Caribbean Cruises have already reached settlements after suing the Florida-based company in the US.Related TopicsVolcanoesNew ZealandMore on this storyCompany found guilty over NZ volcano disasterPublished31 October 2023Top StoriesLive. George Galloway wins Rochdale by-election by nearly 6,000 votesThis is for Gaza, says Galloway on by-election winPublished24 minutes ago’More than 100′ die in crowd near Gaza aid convoyPublished4 hours agoFeaturesThe Papers: Gaza convoy ‘chaos’ and rogue police ‘hiding in plain sight’Analysis: A royal dilemma as public curiosity over Kate growsChecking Israel’s claim to have killed 10,000 Hamas fightersMore than 30,000 killed in Gaza, health ministry saysWatch: Hairy Biker Dave Myers rides on to Ready Steady Cook. VideoWatch: Hairy Biker Dave Myers rides on to Ready Steady CookListen: Sadiq Khan on Sarah Everard Murder + Islamophobia. AudioListen: Sadiq Khan on Sarah Everard Murder + IslamophobiaAttributionSounds’No hearse’ for Navalny as family prepares funeralUK asylum backlog falls with record approvalsPostcode check: How’s the NHS coping in your area?Elsewhere on the BBCMead, Poirot, and a stinky brontosaurusLaugh along with Frank and his all-star panel as they decode the absurdity of online reviewsAttributionSoundsSoviet Russia’s most popular holiday campMaria Kim Espeland tells Lucy Burns about life in the camp in the 1980sAttributionSoundsBig Brother behind closed doorsHow Britain’s first ‘official’ reality show became a global phenomenonAttributionSoundsCan we really find Anglo-Saxon double entendre?Ian Hislop’s on the hunt for the earliest examples of enduring British jokesAttributionSoundsMost Read1Trans prisoner Tiffany Scott dies in jail2Suicide poison seller tracked down by BBC3Gaza convoy ‘chaos’ and rogue police ‘hiding in plain sight’4Nineteen councils can sell assets to cover services5Analysis: A royal dilemma as public curiosity over Kate grows6Olly Alexander reveals the UK’s Eurovision entry7Dave Myers’ wife remembers ‘wonderful, brave man’8’No hearse’ for Navalny as family prepares funeral9This is for Gaza, says Galloway on by-election win10’More than 100′ die in crowd near Gaza aid convoy [ad_1] The 2019 New Zealand volcano eruption killed 22 people and gravely injured 25 others. 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newsinsightplus.com 1980sAttributionSoundsBig2019.Tourism March 1, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountLiveNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityAsiaChinaIndiaWhite Island volcano: Tour operators ordered to pay millions to victimsPublished47 minutes agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage source, EPAImage caption, 22 people died in 2019 when the White Island volcano eruptedBy Frances MaoBBC NewsA New Zealand court has ordered NZ$10m (£4.8m; $6m) in compensation to the victims of the White Island volcano disaster, where 22 people died.In December 2019, 47 people were touring the volcano when it erupted, killing nearly half of the group and gravely injuring everyone else.The firms which owned the island and operated tours were found guilty last year of negligence and safety breaches.Their failure to provide proper checks had ruined many lives, the court said.The volcano had been showing signs of heightened activity in the weeks leading up to the eruption but operators ignored these, the court said.On Friday, the Auckland District Court ordered the company which owned the island, Whakaari Management Limited, to pay NZ$4.57m in damages to victims.Whakaari Management – named after the Maori name for the island – licenced tour groups to visit the volcano.The court also ordered White Island Tours, the company which had brought the tourists to the island for a walking tour, to pay NZ$4.68m in reparations. Three other tour companies, Volcanic Air Safaris, Aerius Limited and Kahu NZ Limited, were also ordered to pay damages. The privately owned volcano that is always activeSeventeen of the tourists who died were from Australia, with the others from the US, New Zealand and Germany. Affected visitors on the day had also come the UK, China and Malaysia.Judge Evangelos Thomas said in his judgement on Friday that the compensation was “no more than a token recognition” of the victims’ suffering. Families were broken after the death of loved ones, he acknowledged. Many of the survivors suffered terrible burns and were still enduring a painful toll.”The treatment was often painful, arduous, disheartening. For many it remains ongoing,” he said. “Many people grapple with disfigurement of one kind or another. It’s not just simply the physical injury that has caused such harm… the emotional consequences deepen the suffering. We acknowledge that harm.”Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, A 2021 memorial in the New Zealand town of Whakatane to the tourists affected in the disasterPayments will be divided among the victims, with greater amounts to the families of the 22 people who were killed.In testimonies earlier this week, relatives of those who died told the court the “grief never goes away”.The mother of Hayden Marshall-Inman, a 40-year-old tour guide killed in the eruption, said: “When Hayds died on White Island, a part of me died. My heart carries the loss of him day and night.”The owners of the island, Whakaari Management, were also fined NZ$978,000 for breaching workplace safety laws.The firm’s owners previously faced individual criminal prosecutions over the deaths, but the charges were dropped last year.The disaster prompted the most extensive and complex investigation ever undertaken by WorkSafe NZ, which was also criticised for failing to monitor activities on the island between 2014 and 2019.Tourism activities on White Island have not resumed since the eruption.Some of the tourists who bought their tour ticket to Whakaari through Royal Caribbean Cruises have already reached settlements after suing the Florida-based company in the US.Related TopicsVolcanoesNew ZealandMore on this storyCompany found guilty over NZ volcano disasterPublished31 October 2023Top StoriesLive. George Galloway wins Rochdale by-election by nearly 6,000 votesThis is for Gaza, says Galloway on by-election winPublished24 minutes ago’More than 100′ die in crowd near Gaza aid convoyPublished4 hours agoFeaturesThe Papers: Gaza convoy ‘chaos’ and rogue police ‘hiding in plain sight’Analysis: A royal dilemma as public curiosity over Kate growsChecking Israel’s claim to have killed 10,000 Hamas fightersMore than 30,000 killed in Gaza, health ministry saysWatch: Hairy Biker Dave Myers rides on to Ready Steady Cook. VideoWatch: Hairy Biker Dave Myers rides on to Ready Steady CookListen: Sadiq Khan on Sarah Everard Murder + Islamophobia. AudioListen: Sadiq Khan on Sarah Everard Murder + IslamophobiaAttributionSounds’No hearse’ for Navalny as family prepares funeralUK asylum backlog falls with record approvalsPostcode check: How’s the NHS coping in your area?Elsewhere on the BBCMead, Poirot, and a stinky brontosaurusLaugh along with Frank and his all-star panel as they decode the absurdity of online reviewsAttributionSoundsSoviet Russia’s most popular holiday campMaria Kim Espeland tells Lucy Burns about life in the camp in the 1980sAttributionSoundsBig Brother behind closed doorsHow Britain’s first ‘official’ reality show became a global phenomenonAttributionSoundsCan we really find Anglo-Saxon double entendre?Ian Hislop’s on the hunt for the earliest examples of enduring British jokesAttributionSoundsMost Read1Trans prisoner Tiffany Scott dies in jail2Suicide poison seller tracked down by BBC3Gaza convoy ‘chaos’ and rogue police ‘hiding in plain sight’4Nineteen councils can sell assets to cover services5Analysis: A royal dilemma as public curiosity over Kate grows6Olly Alexander reveals the UK’s Eurovision entry7Dave Myers’ wife remembers ‘wonderful, brave man’8’No hearse’ for Navalny as family prepares funeral9This is for Gaza, says Galloway on by-election win10’More than 100′ die in crowd near Gaza aid convoy [ad_1] The 2019 New Zealand volcano eruption killed 22 people and gravely injured 25 others. Continue reading