John Kerry ‘stable’ in Geneva after cycling accident
US Secretary of State John Kerry is in a stable condition in a Geneva hospital after being injured in an accident while cycling in the Alps near Scionzier, France, his spokesman said.
The accident occurred on Sunday while Kerry was out cycling the day after meetings with his Iranian counterpart Mohammad Javad Zarif in Geneva to try to overcome obstacles in negotiations on curbing Tehran’s nuclear programme.
He was flown by medical helicopter from the scene of the accident to Geneva’s main public hospital, where he was being examined, spokesman John Kirby said.
“Secretary Kerry is stable and likely suffered a leg injury. He did not lose consciousness,” Kirby said, adding that paramedics and a doctor were on the scene with Kerry’s motorcade at the time of the accident. Later reports said he had broken his right femur.
The 71-year-old secretary of state is an avid cyclist and often takes his own bike on official trips abroad.
A senior State Department official said it appeared Kerry hit a curb and there was no vehicle involved in the accident.
He had been due to travel to Madrid later on Sunday before heading to Paris for a meeting with Iraqi Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi and members of a US-supported coalition fighting the militant group Islamic State. But it was later reported that he was to return to his home town of Boston on Sunday for treatment at Massachusetts General Hospital.
It was not immediately clear how his injury would affect the nuclear negotiations with just a month left before a June 30 deadline for a final agreement between Iran and the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China.
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