• Most Popular
  • Most Shared
A serviceman of the Belarussian Interior Ministry's special unit demonstrates his skills during a show in Minsk, February 28, 2010.  REUTERS/Vasily Fedosenko

Strange and unusual

Our photographers sometimes capture moments that are strange and offbeat. Here's a recent sampling.  Slideshow 

    Planes circle isle after controller overslept

    ATHENS
    Mon Sep 29, 2008 3:54pm EDT
    The control tower of the Antonio Carlos Jobim International airport is seen in Rio de Janeiro March 31, 2007. REUTERS/Bruno Domingos

    The control tower of the Antonio Carlos Jobim International airport is seen in Rio de Janeiro March 31, 2007.

    Credit: Reuters/Bruno Domingos

    ATHENS (Reuters) - Two airplanes due to land on the Greek island of Lesbos had to circle above the Aegean sea for more than half an hour because an air traffic controller overslept, police said Monday.

    Oddly Enough

    An Olympic Airlines aircraft, arriving from the Greek capital Athens, and a Slovakian Airlines plane made several failed attempts to contact control tower personnel.

    "They were calling the tower to get directions, but no one would answer," a police official, who declined to be named, told Reuters. "The woman later said she overslept."

    The airport's secondary control service assisted the pilots to land after they had circled for 40 minutes. Police said the controller, who was not named, would be suspended for a few days.

    (Reporting by Renee Maltezou; Editing by Daniel Flynn)



    More from Reuters

    Photo

    Obama to tap Yellen for Fed vice chair: source

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama plans to nominate San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank President Janet Yellen, a respected policy dove, to be vice chairman of the central bank, a source familiar with the process said on Thursday.

    Trader John Boehm works in the 5-year US Treasury Bond Options Pit at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange September 16, 2008.  REUTERS/John Gress

    The big guns fire back

    The Wall Street behemoths that came close to collapse in the financial crisis are back and pushing aside the boutiques that made a killing during the turmoil.   Full Article 

    A migrant worker carries his belongings as he waits for his train inside Shanghai Railway Station February 8, 2010. REUTERS/Nir Elias

    "Aliens" in urban China

    They build the skyscrapers and lay the highways, but China's "hukou" system means 200 million migrant workers still can't live like their urban counterparts.  Full Article