Khaleej Times

Search begins for 2 foreign climbers

- Reuters

islamabad — Pakistani rescuers were searching on Wednesday for a Spanish man and an Argentinia­n who went missing on a notoriousl­y treacherou­s Himalayan peak known as “Killer Mountain”, an official said.

A ground team began searching for Alberto Zerain Berasatei from Spain and Mariano Galacan from Argentina but helicopter­s could not join the search effort due to poor weather, said Karrar Haidri, spokesman for the Alpine Club of Pakistan.

The two men, who were part of a 13-strong expedition that set out last month to climb the 8,126 metre Nanga Parbat, the world’s ninth highest mountain, were last heard from on Saturday.

The rest of their party had returned to base camp, Haidri confirmed.

“In such weather conditions and without adequate food supply, survival appears unlikely but there was the case of Tomaz Humar a few years ago,” Haidari said, adding that rescue officials are doing everything possible to find the men.

Slovenian mountainee­r Humar was trapped on Nanga Parbat for six days in 2005 before army helicopter­s found him trapped under a ledge at a height of nearly 6000 metres.

Pakistan rivals Nepal for the number of peaks over 7,000 metres (23,000 feet) and is home to the world’s second-highest mountain, K2, as well as three others which are among the world’s 14 summits higher than 8,000 metres.

In 2013, gunmen dressed as police officers shot 10 foreign mountainee­rs and a local guide at Nanga Parbat’s 4,200-metre base camp.

The attack, later claimed by the Taleban, resulted in a major decrease in climbing expedition­s, wrecking communitie­s dependent on climbing tourism for income and depriving Pakistan’s economy of much-needed dollars.—

 ?? Reuters ?? A view of the snow-packed Nanga Parbat mountain in northern Pakistan . —
Reuters A view of the snow-packed Nanga Parbat mountain in northern Pakistan . —

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