
Tuesday, 5th August 2008
Rescuers reach Italian mountaineer on K2
A paramedic provides treatment to Wilco van Rooijen, the rescued leader of a Dutch climber team, at a hospital in the northern Pakistani town of Skardu, yesterday.
Rescuers have reached an Italian mountaineer who refused to succumb to frostbite and exhaustion on K2 after 11 other climbers perished on the world's second-highest mountain, a Pakistani guide said yesterday.
"Marco (Confortola) is being accompanied by four rescuers and most probably, he'll be brought tonight to the Advance Base Camp (ABC) that is at an altitude of 6,000 metres," Sultan Alam, a Pakistani guide, said from K2 base camp.
Three Pakistani high-altitude porters and an American climber reached Mr Confortola after racing up the mountain to bring him to the camp where food and medicine were waiting, he said.
Darkness had fallen and it was likely that the 37-year-old climber would spend another night on K2, before a helicopter could airlift him off the towering pyramid of rock and ice.
Mr Confortola's feet were in "very bad" shape but he appeared to have saved his hands, Agostino Da Polenza, head of the Ev-K2-CNR mountaineering group in Italy, told Reuters after speaking to the lost climber by satellite phone.
"Of course, of course, I'll keep going. Imagine if I gave up now," Mr Da Polenza quoted Mr Confortola as saying yesterday before being reached by the rescuers.
A Pakistani army helicopter had earlier plucked two Dutch climbers off the slopes of the remote 8,611 metre peak, deep in the Karakoram range, bordering China.
Pakistani authorities confirmed that 11 climbers perished in the deadliest episode in K2's history but rescuers were unsure whether anyone else was missing.
Anxious fellow climbers kept vigil at K2 base camp, scanning the steep flanks of the mountain.
Among the dead were three Koreans; two Nepalis; two Pakistani high altitude porters; French, Serbian, and Norwegian climbers; and an Irishman earlier listed as missing.
Several died when an ice wall collapsed and tore away their fixed lines as descended having reached K2's summit on Friday.
Others succumbed in the freezing, oxygen-starved air, stranded at an altitude known as the "Death Zone".
Several teams had massed for an assault on the summit. At least two climbers died during the ascent. Then disaster struck during the descent at a steep gully known as the Bottleneck, above 8,200 metres.
The ice fall killed the three Korean and two Nepali climbers and left around a dozen more, exhausted from the ascent, stranded in the thin air above the Bottleneck. Wilco van Rooijen, the rescued leader of a Dutch team that lost at least three members, said from his hospital bed in the northern Pakistani town of Skardu how he slept without a sleeping bag, food or water.
Mr Van Rooijen said he was screaming instructions for people to work together, but they appeared consumed by self-preservation.
"They were thinking of my gas, my rope, whatever," he said. "Actually everybody was fighting for himself and I still do not understand why everybody was leaving each other."
Some tried to find their own way off a mountain where anyone who goes missing almost inevitably dies.







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