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: world
||| PAKISTAN. Two Dutch
climbers rescued
Eleven feared dead on K-2
||| A Pakistani tour
operator says eleven climbers are feared to have died in
an avalanche after scaling the world’s second-highest
mountain, K-2. ||| A helicopter plucked two frostbitten
Dutch climbers from K-2.
Stephen Graham | AP
Writer
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan – A helicopter plucked two
frostbitten Dutch climbers from K-2 on Monday after an
avalanche and exposure left at least 11 people presumed
dead on the world's second-highest mountain. The rescue
of a stranded Italian was aborted but, he told a
colleague, "I am surely not going to give up now."
One of the rescued men, Wilco Van Rooijen, blamed
mistakes in preparation for the final ascent, not just
the avalanche, for one of mountaineering's worst
disasters.
"Everything was going well to Camp Four and on summit
attempt everything went wrong," Van Rooijen told The
Associated Press by phone from a military hospital,
where he was being treated for frostbitten toes.
K-2, which lies near Pakistan's northern border with
China, is regarded by mountaineers as more challenging
to conquer than Mount Everest, the world's highest peak.
K-2 is steeper, rockier and more prone to sudden, severe
weather.
Van Rooijen said several expeditions waited through July
for good weather to scale K-2 and decided to go for the
summit when winds dropped on Friday. In all, about two
dozen climbers made the ascent, officials said.
But Van Rooijen said advance climbers laid ropes in some
of the wrong places on the 28,250-foot peak, including
in a treacherous gully known as as "The Bottleneck."
"We were astonished. We had to move it. That took of
course, many, many hours. Some turned back because they
did not trust it anymore," said Van Rooijen, 40.
He said those who went on reached the summit just before
nightfall. As the fastest climbers descended in darkness
across The Bottleneck, about 1,148 feet below the summit,
a huge serac, or column of ice, fell. Rooijen said a
Norwegian climber and two Nepalese sherpas were swept
away. His own team was split up in the darkness.
The Ministry of Tourism released a list of 11 climbers
believed dead: three South Koreans, two Nepalis, two
Pakistanis and mountaineers from France, Ireland, Serbia
and Norway.
At least two fell on their way up the mountain, before
the avalanche.
Van Rooijen said after the avalanche there was a "whiteout"
on the mountain – meaning cloud had descended, making it
virtually impossible to see the precipitous route down.
But he pushed on as he was starting to suffer snow
blindness.
On his descent, he said he passed three South Koreans.
They declined his offer of help.
“We
were astonished. We had to move it. That took of course,
many, many hours. Some turned back because they did not
trust it anymore.”
"There was a Korean guy hanging upside down. There was a
second Korean guy who held him with a rope but he was
also in shock and then a third guy was there also, and
they were trying to survive but I had also to survive,"
he said.
It was not immediately clear if they were the same three
Koreans who died. Two other Koreans made it back to the
base camp, which lies at about 16,400 feet, an organizer
of their expedition said.
The Italian climber, Marco Confortola, descended to
20,340 feet but bad weather forced officials to abort a
helicopter rescue Monday, said Shahzad Qaiser, a top
official at the tourism ministry.
"Up there it was hell. During the descent, beyond 8,000
meters (26,000 feet), due to the altitude and the
exhaustion I even fell asleep in the snow and when I
woke up I could not figure out where I was," the ANSA
news agency quoted the stranded Italian, Marco
Confortola, as telling his brother Luigi by satellite
phone.
"My hands are fine, while my feet are black from
frostbite. Anyway, I can walk and I want to descend to
the base camp."
Agostino Da Polenza of Everest-K2-CNR, an Italy-based
high-altitude scientific research group, also spoke to
Confortola on Monday.
"I never gave up in my life, I am surely not going to
give up now," Da Polenza quoted the climber as saying on
his group's Web site.
Another attempt was planned for Tuesday, Qaiser said.
The Irish climber, 37-year-old Gerard McDonnell, on
Friday became the first person from his country to reach
the summit of K2. He is believed to have died on the way
down.
Pat Falvey, a family friend, said they "are holding up
well and are very proud of Ger's achievement and are
still in total shock in relation to the fact that he may
not be coming back."
Before his death, 61-year-old Frenchman Hugues
d'Aubarede gave an account of the climb, with freezing
temperatures, bad weather and beautiful vistas – via a
blog.
On the eve of his death, his last message from the foot
of The Bottleneck was: "I would love it if everyone
could contemplate this ocean of mountains and glaciers.
They put me through the wringer, but it's so beautiful.
The night will be long but beautiful."
The reported toll was the highest from a single incident
on K-2 since at least 1995, when seven climbers perished
after being caught in a fierce storm.
About 280 people have summited K-2 since 1954, when it
was first conquered by Italians Achille Compagnoni and
Lino Lacedell. Dozens of deaths have been recorded since
1939, most of them occurring during the descent. |||
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