FIFA Men's World Cup
Rescuers in Pakistan call off efforts to save Polish climber
FIFA Men's World Cup

Rescuers in Pakistan call off efforts to save Polish climber

Published Jan. 28, 2018 5:30 p.m. ET

ISLAMABAD (AP) Volunteers rescued a French mountaineer from a Himalayan peak but called off efforts to retrieve a Polish climber who was declared dead after the dramatic and treacherous rescue effort.

Elisabeth Revol and Tomasz Mackiewicz were climbing Nanga Parbat, the ninth highest peak in the world at 8,126 meters (26,660 feet), but called for help Friday, fellow climber Masha Gordon said.

Four volunteers from a separate Polish expedition set out to find them and managed to reach Revol, a renowned female mountaineer who was suffering from frostbite on her feet and could not walk.

Poor weather prevented the team from reaching Mackiewicz, who had snow blindness and altitude sickness, Karrar Haidri, a top official in the Pakistan Alpine Federation, said Sunday.

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Revol was brought down the mountain Sunday to a helicopter that flew her to the mountain town of Sakrdu, from where she was taken to Islamabad for treatment at Shifa International Hospital, Haidri said.

A physician at the hospital said Revol was in stable condition and her injuries were not life threatening. He spoke on condition of anonymity as per the hospital's policy.

''The rescue of Tomasz is unfortunately not possible - because of the weather and altitude it would put the life of the rescuers in extreme danger,'' wrote Ludovic Giambiasi, Revol's fellow climber and trainer who posted regular updates on Facebook. ''It's a terrible and painful decision. We are in deep sadness. All our thoughts go out to Tomek's family and friends. We are crying.''

The Polish Foreign Ministry said it would fund the rescue effort, along with 100,000 euros raised online in a crowdfunding effort organized by fellow climber Masha Gordon.

Gordon described to The Associated Press the frantic effort to raise money and get it to the right people, and then organize a helicopter during gaps in rough weather.

''They were not tourists, they were very serious mountaineers,'' Gordon said of the two climbers. Both had made the ascent before, and were trying the especially challenging feat of doing it in winter.

The leftover funds will be publicly tracked and given to Mackiewicz's widow, Anna, and their three children, who live in Poland, Gordon said. Online messages of mourning for Mackiewicz poured in from other climbers.

Gordon, a former banker who works to finance women's mountain-climbing expeditions, described Revol as ''the strongest female alpinist alive'' despite her small, 42-kilogram (92-pound) frame and being ''a PE teacher from the middle of nowhere in France.''

The French consul in Islamabad met with Revol upon her arrival in Islamabad and French authorities were in touch with her family in France, a French official said on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to be named publicly.

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Associated Press writer Angela Charlton in Paris contributed to this report.

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