Dutch prince’s condition critical

In this February 19, 2011 file photo Netherland's Prince Friso, left, and his wife Princess Mabel, right, pose with their daughters Luana and Zaria for photographers during a photo session in the Austrian skiing resort of Lech. Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte and the Austria Press Agency say Queen Beatrix's second son Friso of the Dutch royal family has been hit by an avalanche in Austria. Austrian news agency APA reported Friday Prince Friso was buried under snow for 15 minutes before he was rescued and taken to a hospital in Innsbruck. (AP Photo/Kerstin Joensson, File)

In this February 19, 2011 file photo Netherland's Prince Friso, left, and his wife Princess Mabel, right, pose with their daughters Luana and Zaria for photographers during a photo session in the Austrian skiing resort of Lech. Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte and the Austria Press Agency say Queen Beatrix's second son Friso of the Dutch royal family has been hit by an avalanche in Austria. Austrian news agency APA reported Friday Prince Friso was buried under snow for 15 minutes before he was rescued and taken to a hospital in Innsbruck. (AP Photo/Kerstin Joensson, File)

Published Feb 17, 2012

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Vienna/Amsterdam - Dutch Prince Johan Friso was in critical condition in hospital after he was buried in an avalanche while skiing off piste in the Austrian Alps on Friday, authorities said.

Queen Beatrix's middle son was pulled unconscious from the snow 20 minutes after the accident and resuscitated, the mayor of the upscale western resort of Lech told the Austria Press Agency (APA).

The prince was skiing with one companion away from marked ski runs when the mass of snow, 30 metres wide and 40 metres long, hit them around midday, APA said.

The 43-year-old prince, who gave up his right to the throne a decade ago, was flown to the university clinic in the western city of Innsbruck.

His condition was “stable but life threatening”, and the queen and his wife were at his side, the Dutch government said in a statement.

The Dutch royal family often spends winter holidays in Lech in the province of Vorarlberg - which like other parts of Austria has been blanketed with heavy snow in recent weeks.

Many parts of the country have avalanche alerts in effect, but some adventurous skiers still venture off piste. In Lech, the alert level was four on a scale of five at the time.

“It was in open space, not on a secured piste,” a Lech police official said about the place where the accident took place.

A second Dutch government statement suggested it could take days before doctors would have a clearer picture of the prince's medical prognosis.

“The rescue chain functioned perfectly and worked within a short time,” the police official in Lech told Reuters.

“After the emergency call, rescue crews were on the scene with rescue helicopters. He could be located immediately and freed,” he said, adding the prince had been skiing with a group.

A tourism official in Lech told APA the prince was wearing a beeper that helped rescue crews find him quickly and that the companion was able to free himself and call for help.

Prince Johan Friso's older brother is Crown Prince Willem-Alexander and his younger brother is Prince Constantijn.

Johan Friso gave up his right to the Dutch throne when he married a commoner whose past was considered too tainted for her to become a member of the Dutch royal house.

When he asked for official permission in 2003 to marry Mabel Wisse Smit, Dutch media published details of her relationship with mobster Klaas Bruinsma, who was shot and killed in 1991 in front of the Amsterdam Hilton hotel.

Following the revelations, the couple decided not to get official permission for their marriage.

The London-based royal joined URENCO, a uranium enrichment company, in 2011 as chief financial officer after earlier working at investment bank Goldman Sachs. - Reuters

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