Vancouver Sun

Polish climbers hit by B.C. avalanche call home for help

- BETH LEIGHTON

Two mountainee­rs from Poland set off an internatio­nal rescue effort after being caught in an avalanche in eastern British Columbia.

The men were climbing Whitehorn Mountain in the Rockies on Monday when they were hit by a major avalanche that tumbled them “quite a distance,” said Dale Mason, manager of Robson Valley Search and Rescue.

“I’m amazed that they were even able to retrieve the satellite phone out of their pack. I’m surprised they still had their packs on. I fully expected them to be ripped right off them,” he said from his home in McBride.

But the only call the men were able to make was to a colleague in Poland, said Lukasz Weremiuk, first counsellor at the Polish Embassy in Ottawa. The colleague in Poland immediatel­y dialed the embassy in Ottawa and Weremiuk picked up.

He said the Polish contact reported that his friends, profession­al mountainee­rs and members of the Polish Mountainee­ring Associatio­n, were badly injured with multiple fractures.

“They were in need of assistance, they couldn’t move, they couldn’t descend,” Weremiuk said.

The caller was able to supply vital informatio­n that helped launch the rescue.

“We had some kind of approximat­e location, altitude, side of the mountain, but at some point we were also able to get the GPS co-ordinates from Poland,” said Weremiuk.

That clarified which Whitehorn Mountain was involved, because Weremiuk said maps showed two — one in B.C., the other in Alberta.

He called 911 and the embassy was put through to B.C. Emergency Health Services.

“It was a very unusual routing of the call,” said emergency health services spokeswoma­n Shannon Miller.

“When I talked to the dispatcher­s they were like, ‘You know, I’ve worked here a lot of years and I have never had a dispatch call quite like this.’ “

Every call, its origin and details, had to be noted, Miller added, including calls to dispatch three separate rescue teams from the Robson Valley, Jasper and Banff national parks, and two air ambulances from different airports.

“It was a high level of co-ordination by our provincial agency, but

I’m amazed that they were even able to retrieve the satellite phone out of their pack. I’m surprised they still had their packs on.

fascinatin­g,” she said.

Back on the phone in Ottawa, Weremiuk realized another drama was unfolding at exactly the same time.

A van driver was targeting pedestrian­s on a street in Toronto, killing 10 and injuring many more.

“So I imagine 911 was really busy at that time, but none of this affected the assistance that we received, ” he said, offering the embassy’s gratitude to Canadian emergency services and, in particular, to emergency services in British Columbia.

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