Armed with drones, Spanish and Pakistani mountaineers on Tuesday searched, despite diminishing hopes, for two European climbers who went missing over a week ago on the world’s ninth-highest mountain in bad weather, officials said.
The search for Italian Daniele Nardi and Briton Tom Ballard, missing for more than a week on Nanga Parbat — known as “Killer Mountain” because of its dangerous conditions — produced no leads, increasing fears the pair might have perished.
Though the latest search by rescuers remained unsuccessful, the operation was likely to continue yesterday.
Alpine Club of Pakistan secretary Karrar Haidri said that despite the long time that Nardi and Ballard have been missing, the search-and-rescue team was still holding out hope.
“Miracles do happen and have happened in the past in such incidents, so we are hoping to find them,” Haidri said.
He said the families of the missing climbers were being informed about the search results.
Missing climbers’ family members and friends have raised funds to continue the search operation, he added.
The Pakistani military has provided helicopters for the search that took off from the northern town of Skardu.
Italian Ambassador to Pakistan Stefano Pontecorvo tweeted that the search resumed on Tuesday and that the rescuers were planning to use drones.
He praised the Pakistani and Spanish mountaineers trying to trace Nardi and Ballard.
Ballard’s disappearance on the mountain with a peak of 8,126m has hit Scotland particularly hard because he is the son of Alison Hargreaves, the first woman to scale Mount Everest alone.
Ballard was born in England and grew up in the Scottish Highlands.
Hargreaves died at age 33 while descending the summit of K2, which is part of the Karakoram range on the border of Pakistan, India and China.
The Karakoram range is among a complex of ranges including the Himalayas.
Mountain guide Sandy Allan, who climbed with Hargreaves and knew Ballard, on Monday said that he remained hopeful, but admitted to having some “negative thoughts” after rescue flights failed to locate the pair.
“I think people are getting really worried and very sad about the whole thing,” Allan said.
Nardi, 42, from near Rome, has attempted the Nanga Parbat summit in winter several times in the past.
Ballard, 30, also a skilled climber, in 2015 became the first person to solo climb all six major north faces of the Alps in one winter.
The search team includes Spaniard Alex Txikon and his three colleagues, including a physician, and also Pakistani mountaineer Ali Sadpara, who is familiar with the peak.
Bad weather twice forced the search teams to halt the operation last week, but the search mission helicopters flew even after Pakistan shut its airspace because of an escalation with India over the disputed region of Kashmir.
Pakistani officials say their helicopters would continue assisting the families of the climbers until they decide to halt the search.
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