Berlin, Aug 14 : Emergency helicopters rescued 20 people on Saturday who had been trapped for 17 hours overnight on an Alpine cable car at some 100 metres above ground near Germany's most famous castle.
Helicopter crews lifted the cable car operator and 19 tourists to safety early Saturday from a gondola suspended some 100 metres above the ground on Tegelberg mountain in southern Germany, emergency services spokesman Roland Ampenberger said, reports Daily Mail.
The cable car that climbs the mountain was halted Friday after a paraglider tandem flight crashed into its cables, but strong winds hindered a swift rescue, police said.
A mountain rescue specialist was lowered into the gondola late Friday, however, providing enough food and clothing to keep the trapped tourists warm and fed through the night. He also stayed with the tourists, who ranged from age four to 75.
Those inside the 12 square-metre gondola were “tense, but remained calm,” thanks to a permanent radio link with rescue forces, said Ampenberger.
“What helps people in such a situation the most is information. It gives them a sense of safety,” he told the German news agency dapd.
The (6,170-foot) 1,880-metre Tegelberg is within sight of one of Germany's most popular tourist attractions, Neuschwanstein Castle, which is often viewed as the inspiration for one of Walt Disney's fairytale castles.
The first to be airlifted from the gondola were two men, then four children and then everyone else.
The entire rescue operation took about two hours, and more than 200 emergency personnel were on site, Bavaria's mountain rescue service said.
The incident also blocked Tegelberg's second gondola, but that cable car was halted only 70 metres above ground and its 30 passengers were roped down to safety Friday evening, it said.
Emergency services also airlifted some 130 people trapped at the mountain's top Friday back to the nearby village of Schwangau.
The two paragliders—a 54-year-old pilot and a 35-year-old passenger—were rescued by helicopter Friday and suffered only minor injuries.
Police have opened an investigation.