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Rescuers resume search after Italian glacier collapse kills six

By Michael Fitzpatrick - RFI
Europe ASSOCIATED PRESS - GUIDO BERNARD
JUL 4, 2022 LISTEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS - GUIDO BERNARD

Rescuers resumed the search for survivors on Monday after an avalanche set off by the collapse of the largest glacier in the Italian Alps killed at least six people and injured eight others. Several climbers are still missing.

Authorities said they did not know how many climbers were hit when the glacier collapsed Sunday on Marmolada, the highest mountain in the Italian Dolomites.

The disaster struck one day after a record-high temperature of 10 degrees Celsius was recorded at the glacier's summit.

"An avalanche of snow, ice and rock hit an access path at a time when there were several roped parties, some of whom were swept away," emergency services spokeswoman Michela Canova told the French AFP news agency.

Six people have been confirmed dead and eight are injured, she added while "the total number of climbers involved is not yet known".

Two of the injured were taken to hospital in Belluno, another in a more serious condition was taken to Treviso, and five to Trento.

She did not specify the nationalities of the victims, but Italian media reported that foreign nationals were among them.

The Alpine rescue corps has activated a toll-free number for people to report friends or relatives who had not returned from an excursion to the glacier.

Several helicopters took part in the initial rescue operation but the search for survivors had to be suspended at nightfall and would resume early Monday.

Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi expressed his "sincerest condolences" to the victims and their families on Twitter.

A river of snow and rock   

Images filmed from a refuge close to the incident show a river of snow and rock hurtling down the mountain in a thunderous chaos.

Other footage shot by tourists on their mobile phones showed the greyish avalanche sweep away everything in its path.

The mountain rescue team released images showing rescuers and helicopters at the scene to take victims from the valley to the village of Canazei.

Their task is being made more difficult by the fact that bodies are trapped under a layer of ice and rock.

A team of psychologists is on hand to support the relatives of the victims. The Trento public prosecutor's office has opened an investigation to determine the causes of the tragedy.

Further ice collapses expected

Experts quoted by the Corriere della Sera daily said they feared further collapses of ice.

Glacier specialist Renato Colucci told the Italian agency AGI that the phenomenon was "bound to repeat itself", because "for weeks the temperatures at altitude in the Alps have been well beyond normal values".

The recent warm temperatures had produced a large quantity of water from the melting glacier that accumulated at the bottom of the block of ice and caused it to collapse, he added.

The Marmolada glacier is the largest in the Dolomites mountain range, which is part of the Italian Alps and situated on the northern face of Marmolada.

The glacier, nicknamed "the queen of the Dolomites", feeds the Avisio river and overlooks Lake Fedaia in the autonomous Italian province of Trento.

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