Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Saskatchewan Couple Survives Being Buried In Mudslide On B.C. Highway

The Canadian Press, 22 May, 2018 12:14 PM
    KELOWNA, B.C. — A Saskatchewan couple is recovering in hospital after a mudslide swept them off a cliff in British Columbia.
     
     
    Don Struthers said his brother-in-law Gabe Rosescu and his girlfriend, Sheri Niemegeers, were en route to Nelson, B.C., when disaster struck.
     
     
    "They were driving down the road, happy go lucky, excited to see their buddy. And Gabe said all of a sudden they saw one tree kind of fall right onto the road," Struthers said.
     
     
    "They didn't have time to hit the brakes or anything and, before they knew it, they were engulfed by mud and trees. And that's where their memory goes blank."
     
     
    The first person to arrive was a firefighter from Lloydminster, Alta., who recognized the danger, Struthers said.
     
     
    He and his passenger stopped traffic one kilometre back, before approaching the mudslide to see if anyone was hurt.
     
     
    "All of a sudden they heard a voice crying out, it happened to be Gabe. They said they were pretty much chest-deep in mud and trees and branches," Struthers said.
     
     
    He said the couple was lucky that a pileup of trees stopped the vehicle from tumbling all the way down the cliff.
     
     
    Rosescu was airlifted to a Kelowna, B.C., hospital, where he is recovering with head injuries, including some bleeding in the brain and a broken orbital bone.
     
     
    Doctors are waiting until swelling goes down before scheduling a surgery, he said.
     
     
    "I guess they are cautiously optimistic that things will keep improving," Struthers said.
     
     
    Niemegeers was taken to a hospital in Trail, B.C., and is being treated for a broken sternum and ankle.
     
     
    Struthers said Rosescu is a sales rep and Niemegeers works for an oil-field company in northern Saskatchewan.
     
     
    He said they have only been together four or five months, but are head over heels for one another.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Lawsuit Seeks Damages After Women Secretly Recorded In A Work Bathroom

    B.C. Lawsuit Seeks Damages After Women Secretly Recorded In A Work Bathroom
    The former operator of a wedding decor supply business in British Columbia is facing more legal action following his conviction for secretly recording two workers while they used the employee washroom.

    B.C. Lawsuit Seeks Damages After Women Secretly Recorded In A Work Bathroom

    Khalistan Issue Has Derailed Focus Of Trudeau's Visit: Herb Dhaliwal

    Khalistan Issue Has Derailed Focus Of Trudeau's Visit: Herb Dhaliwal
    Canadas first Cabinet minister of Indian origin, Herb Dhaliwal, says the focus of the on-going visit of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to India has been derailed by the Khalistan issue.

    Khalistan Issue Has Derailed Focus Of Trudeau's Visit: Herb Dhaliwal

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced Next Week After Admitting To Murder Of His Mother

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced Next Week After Admitting To Murder Of His Mother
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia man has pleaded guilty to the second-degree murder of his mother.

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced Next Week After Admitting To Murder Of His Mother

    Newfoundland Judge Rules Sexist Slur Against Reporter Was Not A Public Disturbance

    Newfoundland Judge Rules Sexist Slur Against Reporter Was Not A Public Disturbance
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — A judge has ruled a notorious sexist slur aimed at a reporter in St. John's, N.L., was vulgar and offensive but wasn't a crime under the circumstances.

    Newfoundland Judge Rules Sexist Slur Against Reporter Was Not A Public Disturbance

    Canada 150 Saw Record Number Of International Tourists: Statistics Canada

    OTTAWA — Statistics Canada says international tourism set an annual record during Canada 150 last year, with 20.8 million trips of one or more nights.

    Canada 150 Saw Record Number Of International Tourists: Statistics Canada

    Commercial Airplane Incidents, Accidents Jump In 2017, Safety Board Says

    A national pilots association is raising alarm bells over new accident numbers showing a year-over-year jump in incidents involving commercial airliners.

    Commercial Airplane Incidents, Accidents Jump In 2017, Safety Board Says