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Three skiers killed in French Alps avalanche

Emergency crews are engaged in a rescue operation for possible survivors at the Deux Alpes ski resort

A deadly avalanche hit a high school group skiing in the French Alps on Wednesday, killing two students and a Ukrainian skier and seriously injuring three others, officials said.

French President Francois Hollande said mountain emergency services with sniffer dogs and a helicopter were engaged in a rescue operation at the Deux Alpes ski resort, 20 miles southeast of Grenoble.

Officials said the avalanche hit 10 students and a teacher from the Lycee St. Exupery school in Lyon. A telephone crisis center has been set up for relatives and friends at the school, which serves over 2,000 middle school and high school students.

Local officials did not give any information on the number of missing, but said 60 workers had been mobilized in the search-and-rescue operation, which was being hampered by the dark and the continuing danger of more avalanches.

The regional Dauphine Libere newspaper reported that four of the students were found in cardiac arrest. Officials said the teacher is alive and has been taken to a hospital in Grenoble.

Local councilor Gilles Strappazzon told BFM-TV the avalanche occurred after several groups of skiers dislodged a large snow slab. The area had been closed off prior to the accident amid high avalanche warnings and it's unclear why the group ventured onto the ski trail.

There had been little snow in the Alps until just after the New Year, so January's steady snow was fresh and possibly less stable.

The Associated Press

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