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French mountaineer saved on Pakistan peak after daring rescue

An elite group of climbers saved a French mountaineer in a daring night-time rescue on Nanga Parbat nicknamed ‘Killer Mountain’ which is located in northern Pakistan.

A helicopter leaves on January 27 to rescue two climbers on Nanga Parbat mountain.
A helicopter leaves on January 27 to rescue two climbers on Nanga Parbat mountain. POLSKI HIMALAIZM ZIMOWY
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The team of Polish climbers with support from the Pakistani military launched the attempt on Saturday afternoon to rescue stranded French mountaineer Elisabeth Revol, but were unable to reach the second missing climber Polish national Tomek (Tomasz) Mackiewicz.

Officials on Sunday called off the search for Mackiewicz.

“The rescue for Tomasz is unfortunately not possible – because of the weather and altitude it would put the life of rescuers in extreme danger,” wrote Ludovic Giambiasi, a friend of Revol, in a series of updates on Facebook.

“It’s a terrible and painful decision.”

The four rescuers were flown by the Pakistani military from the base camp of K2 – the world's second-highest peak – to reach the stranded climbers.

They were part of a Polish expedition seeking to become the first mountaineers to summit K2’s peak during the winter, when good climbing days are rare.

“The K2 climbers who stopped their historic effort for a winter K2 summit will descend with Elisabeth Revol – one life saved,” said Karar Haideri, spokesman for the Alpine Club of Pakistan, in a statement on Sunday.

The team was evacuated by helicopter after a five and a half hour descent down the mountain to Nanga Parbat's Camp One early Sunday.

The group were then airlifted by helicopter to a hospital in nearby Skardu, where Revol was set to be treated for a number of injuries.

“(Revol) has frostbite and some (snow) blindness,” said Asghar Ali Porik from Jasmine Tours, who helped organise the K2 expedition.

Pakistani climber Karim Shah, who was in contact with the expedition, said the rescue effort was unmatched in the climbing world, with the team ascending 1,200 metres in complete darkness along a treacherous route without a fixed rope.

The rescue mission was launched after the missing alpinists were located Friday by fellow mountaineers using binoculars, who spotted Revol attempting to climb down while Mackiewicz appeared to be crawling due to frostbite.

The pair ran into trouble after making a late descent to a camp Thursday. They were trapped on the side of the mountain for the night without a tent, battered by frigid temperatures and high winds, said Shah.

Nanga Parbat, in northern Pakistan, is the world's ninth-highest mountain at 8,125 metres.

It earned the nickname ‘killer mountain’ after more than 30 climbers died trying to climb it before the first successful summit in 1953.

- with AFP

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