Rescuers search for dozens of trekkers after deadly Nepal snow

At least 20 dead and 70 unaccounted for after unseasonal blizzards and avalanches

Emergency responders carry a victim of an avalanche away from the area near Thorang-La in the Annapurna region of Nepal. A blizzard and avalanche in Nepal’s Himalayas climbing region have killed at least 20 people.
Emergency responders carry a victim of an avalanche away from the area near Thorang-La in the Annapurna region of Nepal. A blizzard and avalanche in Nepal’s Himalayas climbing region have killed at least 20 people.

Mountain rescue teams in Nepal are searching for dozens of missing trekkers after unseasonal blizzards and avalanches killed at least 20 people along the high altitude Annapurna mountain route popular with backpackers.

Army and civilian rescue workers say between 73 and 85 trekkers registered on the trail were unaccounted for. Not all of those people were necessarily trapped by the weather and some may have left the area, rescue workers said.

But the death toll, which included 11 foreigners and three yak herders, was expected to rise with so many unaccounted for after snowstorms brought by the tail end of a cyclone that struck eastern India last weekend.

It was the second major mountain disaster to strike in Nepal this year, after an ice-avalanche killed 16 sherpa guides on Mount Everest in April.

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“This is one of the worst mountaineering accidents that I can remember,” said Gopal Babu Shrestha, the treasurer of the Trekking Agencies’ Association of Nepal, who has been helping with the rescue.

“It is inevitable that the death toll will rise from here.”

Shrestha took part in helicopter rescue operations on Wednesday and said he had seen what looked like bright jackets and backpacks scattered near the Thorang-La pass, at an altitude of 5,416 metres.

The pass is the highest point of the trail that loops around the Annapurna peak, the world’s 10th highest mountain.

A Facebook page set up on Wednesday to help friends and relatives trace loved ones trekking in Nepal quickly filled with concerned posts from the United States, Canada, Australia and South Korea.

Rescue efforts focused on the Thorang-La area, where a blizzard on Wednesday killed six Nepali citizens, three Polish nationals and three Israeli hikers. Separately, in the neighbouring district of Manang, four Canadian hikers and an Indian national were killed in an avalanche.

About 15 people have been rescued, and some are recovering in hospital in Nepal’s capital, Kathmandu.

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The 240 km Annapurna circuit offers spectacular views of jagged peaks and Buddhist villages.

Taking almost three weeks to complete, it is perhaps the most popular walking route in the Himalayas and is dubbed the “apple pie” circuit because of the teahouses lining the route that offer cold beer and home baking.

“It is our most popular trek,” said Hari Thapoliya, a member of the Trekking Team Group in Kathmandu, which offers guides to tourists. “It is not particularly challenging. If you keep fit by running or doing other exercise you can do it.”

The hikers’ deaths come during the peak trekking season in Nepal, home to eight of the world’s 14 highest mountains, including Mount Everest.

For two days this week, Nepal was lashed by heavy rain brought by the cyclone that also battered neighbouring India, killing at least 24 people. In Nepal, the weather triggered blizzards at high altitudes.

A ground team of about 50 soldiers and police joined army helicopters looking for survivors or bodies.

“The weather is good,” said Baburam Bhandari, district governor of Mustang district, the area worst hit by the disaster. “One army helicopter has already left for the site and more helicopters will be pressed into service later.”

Nepal’s climbing business is still recovering from the shock of an ice avalanche that struck the lower reaches of Mount Everest in April, killing 16 guides in the worst disaster in the history of the world’s highest peak.

More than a tenth of the nearly 800,000 tourists who visited Nepal in 2013 went hiking or climbing, providing a key revenue stream for the aid-dependent nation, which relies on income from tourism for 4 per cent of its gross domestic product.

Reuters