Fri, May 25 2012

Polish ambassador struck by lightning in Podgorica, climber dies

Mon, Oct 12 2009 14:15 CET 1417 Views
Polish ambassador struck by lightning in Podgorica, climber dies

Photo: Ethan Miller

A Montenegrin mountain climber died after lightning strike struck him and two other people, including the ambassador of Poland, Jaroslaw Lindenberg, Dnevnik daily reported on October 12 2009, citing radio B92.

The incident occurred around noon on October 11 in a mountain close to the town of Kolasin in the northern part of the country, the report has said.

The three men were part of a party of 11 who were on their way to scale a local peak. The deceased climber was identified by local authorities as Andrei Timovic, a Montenegrin national.

Lindenberg was himself struck but escaped only with minor burns and a broken arm. Subsequently, he was taken to a hospital in Podgorica, Serbian media reported.

  • Print
  • Send via email
  • Translate to
  • Share:

To post comments, please, Login or Register.


Please read the The Sofia Echo forum comments policy.

More in this category

Putin takes Russian presidency for historic third term

World leaders acknowledged Putin's victory with reservations, and international observers say the election was skewed in the former president's favour.

France elects first socialist president in nearly two decades

Hollande's call for more spending and economic growth has struck a chord with French voters.

Serge Sarkisian’s ruling party wins Armenian parliamentary elections – exit polls

Gallup International Association poll gives president Sarkisian’s party 44 per cent, while three main challengers alleged ‘machinations’ by ruling party in what – in contrast to 2008 – reportedly was a largely peaceful election.

Report: Only 14.5 per cent of people have access to free press

The Freedom House report says the media environment in the Middle East and North Africa underwent major improvements in 2011, but remained the worst-performing part of the world.

Don’t like the job, time to move on

Dissatisfaction with jobs is a global phenomenon and two-thirds of workers all over the world intend to look for another job in the near future, the survey concluded.