The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Stricken climber thought his companion might die

Man feared worst after fall in Pakistani mountains

- NEIL HENDERSON nhenderson@thecourier.co.uk

The friend of a Fife mountainee­r who had to be airlifted to safety following an accident almost 23,000ft up a Pakistani mountain has told how he thought his fellow climber was going to die.

Alistair Swinton’s climbing partner Tom Livingston­e revealed he feared the worst after Mr Swinton fell 65ft down a crevasse during their descent from the summit of Koyo Zom mountain.

Badly injured and without food or fuel, the pair were left stranded for 28 hours before finally being reached and airlifted to safety.

It is the second time Mr Swinton, 30, who was born in Leven but now lives in Chamonix in France, has had a near death experience. In 2013, while climbing in the Alps, he survived after being caught up in an avalanche.

Recounting their ordeal, Mr Livingston­e, 28, told of how he managed to haul Mr Swinton back to safety but, covered in blood and severely injured, he was worried his friend might not survive.

He said: “I was glad Ally remained conscious throughout the time waiting for a helicopter rescue, but in the first afternoon he seemed very faint, unresponsi­ve and weak.

“He was shivering and bleeding from his head.

“He was covered in blood. I admit for a time I was genuinely concerned he might die in the night.”

He added: “I did what anyone would do in the ensuing 28 hours and cared for him, as I’m sure he would for me.”

Only hours before, the pair, part of a group of five experience­d alpinists, had been ecstatic having conquered the previously unclimbed west face of Koyo Zom, the highest mountain in the Hindu Raj range.

“It felt so cool to be on the summit, feeling like we were on the moon,” said Mr Livingston­e.

The pair made a partial descent down the eastern side before bedding down for the night on the Pechus glacier.

“We woke with the sun, roped up and trudged down. What happened next was an unlucky mistake by Ally.”

Because of their remote position and Mr Swinton’s deteriorat­ing condition, Mr Livingston­e activated the SOS of his satellite tracker.

Now safely back in the Pakistan capital, Islamabad, Mr Livingston­e concluded: “The main thing is that we’re both safe and well, and we had an amazing adventure.”

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