
Helicopters in Finland crash into each other killing all on board in horror smash as one chopper ‘dropped like a stone'
FIVE people have died after two helicopters crashed into each other in Finland.
One of the helicopters reportedly "dropped like a stone" as the choppers spiralled out of control.
The two helicopters collided and crashed in a wooded area near Eura airport at around 12pm, according to police.
The choppers fell 600ft from the sky.
The police said: 'The accident has resulted in several fatalities.
"The exact number of victims and the identities of the passengers are still being determined."
But the Estonian Ministry of Foreign affairs confirmed to public broadcaster ERR that all five people on board the helicopters had died.
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Times
18 hours ago
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When their baby, Vivian, struggles to breastfeed and doesn't put on weight (a common problem and one that we have free council-run breastfeeding clinics to help with in the UK), Sarah has no one to turn to, and misses the Mormon community. I felt for Sarah — even more so when, without maternity leave pay, she must rush back to work after three months and begin a punishing schedule of pumping milk for Vivian. According to Leonard it's Richard Nixon's fault. In his 1968 presidential campaign he promised to expand access to public childcare. But the conservative branch of his party revolted — Mormons worried that it would upend family structure while others called it communist, so in 1971 Nixon nixed it and childcare policy has been taboo since then. 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Anna's partner, Masa, who grew up in Japan with a single mother and no father figure, is more interested in which pram to buy than spending time with the baby, although when breastfeeding isn't working he accuses Anna of starving their child. Anna's reaction to their relationship breakdown is underpinned by her coming from a country with a strong history of women's rights — she doesn't want their son 'to learn that women are the ones who will take care of all the world's population when babies are born'. In Kenya, Chelsea, 23, gets pregnant after an affair with a married man from a different tribe because of a faulty morning-after pill. Many Kenyan women rely on this pill as there is stigma around other forms of contraception. Birth in Kenya has a lot in common with the US — both are countries with vast gaps between rich and poor, and if you can't afford a private birth it's brutal. Chelsea asks for an epidural and is told it costs US$300, which she can't afford. Only 2 per cent of Kenyan women get epidurals. Still, things have improved since the country made prenatal care free in 2013: the under-five mortality rate has since dropped from 50 to 39.9 deaths per 1,000 live births, according to Unicef. (In the States the figure is 6.5, while in the UK it's 4.5.) Like Sarah, Chelsea goes back to work after three months, but unlike Sarah she can't afford formula milk. Her story is the most painful to read — she is so alone, both her parents are dead and having a baby brings back that grief. • Why am I being judged for having a third child? In Japan, Tsukasa, 33, is also lonely. Japanese fathers haven't traditionally been involved with babies; only two thirds are present at the birth (it's 95 per cent across most of Europe) and her husband, although doting, works all hours. Bedsharing with the baby, which most Japanese parents do, means between 50 and 70 per cent of Japanese couples don't have sex, although Leonard says long working hours also play a role in this sex drought. In America, by contrast, it's 15 per cent. A mother and baby group saves Tsukasa, giving her much needed company. I had my first child in November last year and much of what Leonard describes rings true, from 'the physicality of the work and the psychic weight of suddenly occupying the position of parent' to the unparalleled joy of your baby's first laugh, and overthinking everything down to whether the baby should wear socks. So how does the UK measure up? In my experience we are overstretched on the medical side but lucky that it's free, there is pain relief and choice around birth (albeit with some bias from the NHS towards inductions over caesarean sections). • Sexism is still entrenched, with women taking most of the caring burden — and this is not helped by regressive paternity leave policies. Two weeks' paternity leave is nowhere near enough, nor is statutory maternity pay of £187.18 a week (less than the London living wage). Childcare costs are astronomically high too, but there are growing movements of women campaigning for more support. Four Mothers is part of this movement. It's public interest journalism at its best — powerful human stories peppered with well-chosen facts. When describing Tsukasa's relief at finding women to talk to, Leonard quotes the psychologist Aurélie Athan: 'Debriefing with other new mothers is crucial to psychological wellbeing. It's similar to what trauma victims require. They need to process what's happened to them.' With Four Mothers Leonard has provided that debrief, as she elegantly makes a compelling case for a fairer society.