Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Avalanche kills nine in Alps
Tragedy on France's Mont Blanc
PARIS -- A slab of ice broke off Thursday high in the French Alps, sparking an avalanche that swept nine Europeans to their deaths as they tried to climb Mont Blanc, authorities said. Eleven other climbers were hospitalized and at least four are still unaccounted for.
Two climbers were rescued and emergency crews using dogs and helicopters scoured the churned-up, high-altitude area Thursday to search for the missing. Some other climbers managed to turn back from the thundering slide in time, regional authorities in Haute-Savoie said.
The avalanche, which came after unusually wet weather, sent climbers hurtling down steep slopes at the height of the summer climbing season. Police said one of the climbers may have kicked the ice sheet loose.
The dead were from Britain, Germany, Spain and Switzerland, according to the gendarme service in the French mountain town of Chamonix.
A group of climbers from Switzerland, Germany, Spain, France, Denmark and Serbia was caught in the early-morning avalanche some 4,000 metres high on the north face of Mont Maudit, part of the Mont Blanc range.
The gendarme service said it was alerted around 5:25 a.m. Thursday to the avalanche. A block of ice some 40 centimetres thick broke off and slid down the slope, creating a mass of snow that was two metres thick and 50 metres long.
Several dozen gendarmes and other rescuers worked to pull the dead and injured from the mountain and searched for the missing, but the risk of a new avalanche complicated their work.
The 11 injured were hospitalized in nearby Sallanches, the gendarme service said.
Early summer storms apparently left behind heavy snow that combined with high winds to form dangerous overhanging avalanche conditions on some of the popular routes around Mont Blanc, the highest mountain in western Europe.
"The first elements that we have from testimony are that a climber could have set loose a sheet of ice, and that sheet then pulled down the group of climbers below. I should say that the incline was very, very steep on this northern face," Col. Bertrand Franßois of the Haute-Savoie gendarme service told reporters.
According to recent tweets from climbers, high winds led to overhanging ice slabs forming on the slope. Five days ago, they tweeted that Chamonix saw a monsoon-like downpour that turned to snow at 3,000 metres high.
Jonas Moestrup from the western Danish city of Randers only heard about the accident when he was on his way down from Mont Blanc.
"Three days ago, we ascended it (Mont Maudit). It was shocking to hear, it could easily have been us," he told the Danish news agency Ritzau by telephone. "It is scary and tragic."
"(But) it's part of the thrill that something can go wrong," he told Ritzau.
French Interior Minister Manuel Valls flew over the site later Thursday, and described "a particularly spectacular block of ice." He said the climbers appeared to be an experienced group and the churned-up snow was making the search particularly difficult.
Three Germans and two Spaniards were among the dead, their countries confirmed.
-- The Associated Press
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition July 13, 2012 A19
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