
Two women dead after being pulled from water at pools in Snowdonia national park with helicopter scrambled to scene
TWO women died after being rescued from popular wild swimming pools in Snowdonia last night.
North Wales Police said the women were found in Nant Gwynant valley, in Eryri National Park, Wales.
Officers rushed to the scene at 9.30pm after one woman was pulled from the water.
Another was in the pools on the Watkin path nearby - one of the six main routes to the summit of Yr Wyddfa.
She was also rescued from the water but tragically both women died at the scene.
The large, deep Watkin Path pools are a very popular wild swimming spot due to the clear water and beautiful waterfalls.
The Llanberis Mountain Rescue Team, air ambulance and Coastguard helicopter all attended the scene.
Detective Chief Inspector Andy Gibson of North Wales Police said cops are appealing for anyone who was walking nearby at the time to gt in touch.
An investigation into their deaths is underway and the coroner has been informed.
A North Wales Police spokesperson said: "Police were called at 21:31hrs following a report that one female had been pulled from the water, and another was reported to be in the water at the pools on the Watkin Path.
Most read in The Sun
"The Llanberis Mountain Rescue Team were dispatched to the area along with North Wales Police, the Air Ambulance and the Coastguard Rescue Helicopter.
"The second female was pulled from the water, however, despite the best efforts of all involved both were pronounced dead at the scene."
More to follow...
For the latest news on this story keep checking back at The Sun Online
Thesun.co.uk is your go-to destination for the best celebrity news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures and must-see video.
Like us on Facebook at

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Irish Sun
an hour ago
- The Irish Sun
Olympic rider, 66, filmed striking horse '40 times' in ‘most awful video' banned a year on from Charlotte Dujardin shame
FORMER Olympian Heath Ryan has been suspended following the emergence of a distressing video in which he can be seen whipping a horse around 40 times. Ryan, 66, represented Australia in dressage at Beijing 2008. 3 Footage showed Heath Ryan repeatedly whipping a horse Credit: 3 Ryan, 66, competed at Beijing 2008 Credit: Getty Equestrian Australia have since suspended the Sydney-born rider, while launching an official investigation into the online video. Their statement read: "Equestrian Australia is extremely alarmed and concerned by the treatment of the horse shown in this footage. "Our policies include high standards to protect all participants and their horses against any adverse physical, social, and emotional conditions." In a lengthy Facebook post, Ryan claimed that he had been trying to save the horse, named Nico, from being put down - and that the footage was taken around two years ago. READ MORE SPORT NEWS An excerpt of his post read: "Oh my goodness! The most awful video of me on a young horse has just surfaced. "This horse was dropped off at my place on his way to the knackery. His name is Nico. He was 6 years of age. A beautiful type. "(After the events of the video) I rode Nico for another couple of days and he responded very well. "All of this transpired sincerely with the horse's best interests the sole consideration. Most read in Olympics "I need to add that this happened about two years ago…..and the video has been posted by an unhappy ex-employee. "All I can say is that this awful video was collateral damage of me from the bottom of my heart launching a rescue mission." Dressage trainer at centre of Charlotte Dujardin vid leak unmasked and says Team GB star 'threw her under bus' Ryan went on to add: "I am so sad this was caught on video. If I had been thinking of myself I would have immediately just gotten off and sent Nico to the knackery. "That video was a life or death moment for Nico and I genuinely had to try my very hardest to see if Nico would consider other options. "All of this transpired sincerely with the horse's best interests the sole consideration. Unbelievably it was so successful for everyone except me with the release of this video." DUJARDIN CONTROVERSY Last summer, decorated British Olympian Dujardin, 39, was subsequently The three-time Olympic gold medallist subsequently released a statement, in which she revealed that she was pregnant. It read: "I fully respect the verdict issued by the Federation for Equestrian Sports (FEI), released today. "As the federation has recognised, my actions in the video do not reflect who I am and I can only apologise again. "I understand the responsibility that comes with my position in the sport, and I will forever aim to do better. This has undoubtedly been one of the darkest and most difficult periods of my life, and I would like to take this opportunity to thank everyone who has supported me during this time. "To those of you who have sent messages, emails and tried to reach me to check in on how I am – thank you. Every kind word truly has made a difference, more than you'll ever know. "What I was unable to share at the time is that I am currently pregnant, with my baby due in February. "This was planned well before the Olympics and something my partner Dean and I have been excited about for a long time. "At the moment, the energy I have is focused on Dean and our daughter Isabella, and we are all very much looking forward to the arrival of our new family member." 3 Charlotte Dujardin was suspended last year Credit: PA


The Irish Sun
5 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
I delved into world of ‘righteous slaughter' school shooters & chilling psychological cocktail that drives them to kill
PICTURED staring intensely into the camera lens while cuddling his beloved cat, he looks just like any other young teen. But between dropping out of sixth form and turning 21, something dark grew in the mind of student Artur A - the man responsible for a shooting spree at his old school in Austria. 17 Artur A killed 10 in a rampage in his school in Graz, Austria 17 Lea Ilir Bajrami, 15, tragically lost her life in the attack in Graz Credit: Facebook 17 Emergency workers bring victims out of the school building Credit: AP On Tuesday, that festering resentment saw him walk into two classrooms at BORG Dreirschutzengasse high school in Graz and open fire with a Glock pistol and a shotgun. Today 10 families are mourning his victims, mostly teenagers who had their whole lives ahead of them before they were gunned down in cold blood. Lea Ilir Bajrami and Hana Akmadžićis, both 15, were among the six girls and three boys between 14 and 17 to be killed along with a 59-year-old teacher. Yet those grieving might never know the exact reason why their loved ones were murdered. School shootings are on the rise globally. In America, there were 83 school shootings last year compared to 36 in 2014. While shootings remain rare in Europe, analysis by The Sun shows 83 people have been shot dead in classrooms across the continent since Britain's worst atrocity at Thirty four of the victims were killed in the last two years following three major attacks, including this week's. The lone-wolf nature of perpetrators means there are often no warning bells. Eminent criminologist Professor David Wilson told The Sun: 'The motivation can be a desire for notoriety, for revenge or perhaps because the perpetrator has been radicalised in some way. Austria school shooter who killed 10 pupils revealed after leaving mum final video message "School shooters are often isolated from their peer groups, from the community in which they live and often have troubled relationships with their immediate family. Some will have a personality disorder or other underlying mental health issues. "The 64,000 dollar question is whether it's nature or nurture. For me, it is a messy combination of the two.' 'Justified' in killing Artur A, who killed himself in the school's toilets, is said to have been badly bullied by fellow pupils before leaving sixth form without qualifications. He was only known to police as a victim of pick-pocketing. In a 'farewell letter', he reportedly said goodbye to his parents and framed himself as the victim of bullying, reports Krone. He is also said to have recorded a video and sent it to his mum, speaking about the imminent atrocity, saying he was acting 'of his own free will' and asked her to look after his cat. 17 Hundreds of candles were lit in the main square of Graz Credit: AP 17 Mourners pay their respects at the makeshift shrine Credit: AFP Police later discovered a disassembled pipe bomb at his home. Professor Wilson says shooters often convince themselves that killing others is somehow justified. He said: 'There's very often a sense of righteous slaughter, they feel somehow justified in doing what they have done because they feel entitled to behave that way. 'There's a cocktail of factors unique to each shooter that prompts them to do what they do, but the key message is that these incidents only happen in countries which have liberal gun laws.' 17 The school where Artur A claimed 10 lives Credit: AFP 17 Police block the entrance to the school Credit: AFP Handguns were banned in Britain following the Hamilton, 43, opened fire on a class of 29 five and six-year-olds before turning the gun on himself after becoming obsessed with revenge over rumours spread locally that he was a pervert. Professor Wilson said: 'Hamilton was a very different type of shooter in that he hadn't gone to the school but wanted to take revenge on a community.' Columbine massacre Analysis shows that bullying is a huge driver in school killings. A study by the US Secret Service National Threat Assessment Centre reveals that seven in 10 classroom shooters are under the age of 18. It analyzed the behaviour of 35 attackers and found 80 per cent had been bullied by classmates with more than half the bullying lasting for weeks, months or years. America's most infamous school shooting was Columbine in Colorado in 1999 when 18-year-old Eric Harris and 17-year-old Dylan Klebold killed 13 students and a teacher before taking their own lives. Both killers bore a grudge after being bullied and excluded from the cliques at high school, with Harris writing in his journal, "I hate you people for leaving me out of so many fun things" and Klebold writing "The lonely man strikes with absolute rage." The deadliest came in 2007 when student Cho, 23, was diagnosed with selective mutism and depression. A judge had previously declared him mentally ill and ordered him to attend treatment after he stalked two female students. Yet, he was allowed to buy weapons because he had not been institutionalised. Five years later, 20-year-old Adam Lanza shot dead 20 children aged between six and seven and six staff at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. The US has seen a tenfold rise in incidents involving guns in schools over the last 25 years, from 31 in 2000 to 332 last year. Nine of the 10 deadliest mass shootings in the US occurred after 2007. 17 Students are overcome with grief at a shrine to Columbine victims Credit: AP:Associated Press 17 Dylan Klebold opened fire on classmates after being bullied Credit: Reuters 17 Eric Harris wrote a chilling note in his journal Credit: Reuters Jaclyn Schildkraut, executive director of the Regional Gun Violence Research Consortium at the Rockefeller Institute, says a rise in 'life stressors' such as hardships related to finances, employment, family and relationships drove some to 'act out or respond violently'. She added that "toxic masculinity" has contributed to the steep increase. "If we are trying to understand the root causes of gun violence, we need to start by understanding why people pick up firearms in the first place to inflict harm, regardless of the target of that harm," she said. Robin a psychology professor at Clemson University in South Carolina, studied shootings in school and colleges and found that the majority of perpetrators are white with a median age of 15, feel marginalised or bullied and use the events to take their own lives. She says they are likely to have a history of psychological problems, suffer long-term or acute rejection, such as a break-up, and often have a fascination with guns and violence. 'The individuals behind the Sandy Hook and Columbine shootings, among others, had been diagnosed with an assortment of psychological conditions,' Kowalski wrote for the Brookings Institution. 17 Virginia Tech killer Cho Seung-Hui shot 32 people in the deadliest US attack Credit: NBC 17 Students, family and supporters attend a silent vigil in honour of the 32 victims Credit: Alamy Death toll rising While school shootings are still unusual in Europe, the death toll is high. In May 2023, 13-year-old Kosta Kecmanovic gunned down eight of his fellow pupils and a security guard at his school in Belgrade after drawing up a 'hit list'. In a chilling postscript, Serbian police arrested ten teenagers in the week after the massacre after they posted plans for similar attacks on fellow pupils. Months later in the Czech Republic, postgraduate student David Kozak murdered 14 at Charles University in central Prague. He had previously dropped out of education. Earlier this year, 17 Teachers comfort a student after the Serbian shooting in 2023 claimed nine lives Credit: EPA 17 Belgrade police block the street to the school Credit: AP 17 David Kosak opened fire at his Prague university Credit: czech police While there is no comparison data with America, research by the Rockefeller Institute of Government shows the US had suffered 'more public mass shootings' than countries with similar levels of economic development. According to their study, 109 shootings were recorded in the US between 2020 and 2022, compared to six in France, five in Germany, three in Finland and two in the UK, Austria, Italy, the Netherlands and Sweden during the same period. These figures reflect the severity of gun laws in different countries. According to the Small Arms Survey, there are an estimated 120.5 civilian firearms per 100 people in America. In contrast, the figure is 4.6 in England and Wales, 19.6 in France and Germany, 30 in Austria and 391 in Serbia. 17 Distraught mourners in Sweden, where a gunman opened fire at an adult education centre Credit: Getty 17 Rickard Andersson killed 10 students before turning the gun on himself Credit: Getty


The Irish Sun
5 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Schools plunged into lockdown after ‘man seen with knife' as parents warned ‘do not come' and kids shut inside
TWO schools have been plunged into lockdown following reports of a knifeman prowling the local area. Children at both Bowlee Park Community School and St Mary's RC Primary School in Manchester have been shut inside this morning over fears for their safety, according to Parents were contacted this morning following reports of a man with a knife in the neighbouring Bowlee Park. More to follow... For the latest news on this story keep checking back at The Sun Online is your go-to destination for the best celebrity news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures and must-see video. Like us on Facebook at Read more News