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5 French mountaineers die in avalanche in Italy

Email|Print|Single Page| Text size + By Ariel David
Associated Press Writer / May 1, 2008

ROME—Rescuers on Thursday found the bodies of five French ski mountaineers who had been missing since they were swept away by an avalanche during an excursion in Italy's northwestern Alps.

A single survivor was in critical condition in a hospital.

The bodies of four men and a woman were spotted by a helicopter shortly after dawn following a suspension of the search overnight because of darkness and bad weather, said officials in the cities of Aosta and Turin.

The group was overrun by the avalanche Wednesday afternoon at an altitude of about 8,000 feet while traveling through the Gran Paradiso National Park, an Alpine area north of Turin and near the French border.

The group's guide, also a French citizen, was pulled from the snow Wednesday evening after being spotted by a helicopter, said Claudio Rosset, an Alpine rescue official in Aosta.

The 45-year-old guide was in critical but stable condition in the intensive care unit of Aosta's hospital after suffering abdominal and chest trauma, said hospital spokesman Tiziano Trevisan.

"He is conscious but hasn't said anything," Trevisan told The Associated Press by telephone. "I don't think he's been told about the others."

The five victims were found at the bottom of a gorge and had been dragged down some 500 feet by the avalanche, said Massimo De Michela, a rescue official in Turin.

Rescuers used the helicopter to retrieve the bodies.

The members of the group were all French and between the ages 38 and 60, De Michela said.

The mass of snow descended on the group from Punta Basei, a 10,000-foot peak. Fresh snow had recently fallen on the mountain and the unstable mass is believed to have caused the avalanche, De Michela said.

He said rescue efforts began after owners of the lodge where the group was supposed to spend the night raised the alarm Wednesday. The six mountaineers were hiking more than 7 miles between two mountain lodges in the Gran Paradiso massif , straddling Italy's Piedmont and Valle d'Aosta regions.

"It's a beautiful hike," De Michela said. "It's a pity it ended so badly."

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