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10 confirmed dead, 18 missing after avalanche hits climbers in Indian Himalayas

Satellites show glacier loss in Himalayas
Satellite images show glacier loss in Himalayas due to climate change 01:56

Ten people are confirmed dead after an avalanche struck climbers in the Indian Himalayas, police said Wednesday, with 18 other members of the expedition still missing. Several dozen climbing trainees were caught in Tuesday morning's snowslide near the summit of Mount Draupadi ka Danda-II in the northern state of Uttarakhand.

The Indian air force and local disaster agency were assisting with rescue efforts before heavy snow and rainfall forced them to abandon the search overnight.

"Rescue teams have recovered 10 bodies," the Uttarakhand state police force said on Twitter after operations resumed in the morning.

INDIA-HIMALAYAS-MOUNTAINEERING-ACCIDENT
Evacuees (left) rest after receiving first aid at the ITBP Matli helipad station on October 5, 2022, after being airlifted during a rescue operation for 26 missing climbers struck by an avalanche in the northern state of Uttarakhand.  -/Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP/AFP via Getty Images

Fourteen people have so far been rescued from the site of the avalanche, around 16,000 feet above sea level, and police said five were being treated at a district hospital in Uttarkashi.

Police footage showed several rescued climbers arriving in the town and walking unassisted while escorted by officers.

Uttarakhand Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami confirmed on Twitter that accomplished climber Savita Kanswal, who had summited Everest earlier this year, was among the dead.

Kanswal was an instructor with the expedition and had been feted by the climbing community for summiting the world's highest peak and nearby Makalu in just 16 days -- a women's record.

Dhami said the government would provide immediate financial assistance to those injured in the avalanche along with the families of victims.

State disaster agency spokesperson Ridhim Aggarwal told AFP that the climbers had been stuck in a crevasse after the avalanche hit.

The Nehru Institute of Mountaineering said the expedition included 34 of its trainees, seven instructors and a nursing assistant.

Two air force helicopters had been sent to the region to assist with the search, senior disaster management official Devendra Singh Patwal told AFP.

Fatal climbing accidents are common on the treacherous terrain of the Himalayas, home to Everest and several of the world's highest peaks.

In August, the body of a mountaineer was recovered two months after he fell into a crevasse while crossing a glacier in the neighboring state of Himachal Pradesh.

And last week, renowned U.S. ski mountaineer Hilaree Nelson's body was found on the slopes of Nepal's Manaslu peak after she went missing skiing down the world's eighth-highest mountain. Nelson fell from Mount Manaslu while skiing down with her partner, Jim Morrison. She was given a traditional funeral at a Sherpa cremation ground on Sunday.

On the day of Nelson's accident, an avalanche hit on the 26,781-foot mountain, killing Nepali climber Anup Rai and injuring a dozen others who were later rescued.

Although no substantial research has been done on the impacts of climate change on mountaineering risks in the Himalayas, climbers have reported crevasses widening, running water on previously snowy slopes, and the increasing formation of glacial lakes.

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