Two
Los Angeles-area high school students had fingers severed while taking
part in a “spirit week” group tug-of-war contest, authorities said on
Tuesday.
A
boy and a girl from South El Monte High School were rushed to a local
trauma center on Monday afternoon after their fingers were cut off
during the tug-of-war at lunchtime, fire and school district officials
said.
The
students have undergone surgery to reattach the severed digits, El
Monte Union High School District Superintendent Nick Salerno said.
“I’m
a dad too, and my heart goes out to these kids and their families. To
me the whole thing is unbelievable,” Salerno told Reuters. “I’ve been in
tug-of-wars myself, more than I can even count, and I’ve never heard
anything like this.”
Salerno
said the two teens, who have not been identified by authorities, were
both student athletes participating in annual activities designed to
boost school spirit and participation.
“The
activity that day was tug-of-war. Unfortunately the rope broke and both
students had some fingers severed,” he said, adding that he had no
further details on how the injuries occurred.
A
spokesman for Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center said both students
were listed in stable condition. He declined to elaborate on their
condition or the outcome of the surgery.
Salerno
said the school district had provided counselling for students at South
El Monte High School, which serves about 1,500 students in El Monte, a
city of about 115,000 people in the San Gabriel Valley north of Los
Angeles. [Reuters]
No comments:
Post a Comment