The search for people missing on Sunday in the collapse of part of the Marmolada glacier, the largest in the Italian Alps, continued on Tuesday with the reinforcement of drones and helicopters, although the chances of finding survivors are minimal .
The disaster has so far left seven dead and eight injured, one of whom was released from hospital on Tuesday. The number of people reported missing by their relatives, but whose presence at the time the glacier broke is not confirmed at this stage, fell on Tuesday from a dozen to five.
A burning chapel has been set up within the grounds of the ice rink in Canazei, the locality downstream from the glacier where the crisis unit coordinating the research is also based. The families and loved ones of the victims can thus pay tribute to them.
Among the injured, two Germans, a 67-year-old man and a 58-year-old woman, are still in serious condition.
Rescuers deployed drones equipped with thermal cameras, hoping to locate any survivors in the mass of ice and crumbling rocks, the mayor of Canazei, Giovanni Bernard, told AFP.
But the chances of finding survivors “are almost nil”, warned the head of the high mountain rescue services in the region, Giorgio Gajer.
On Tuesday, only drone and helicopter overflights of the disaster area are planned due to the risk of further collapse of the glacier.
Radars and canine units
“The danger is that other seracs (blocks) of ice could break off. The whole area continues to be closed to access,” explained the Canazei crisis unit.
The president of the Alpine rescue services Maurizio Dellantonio however assured that he was seeking to “organize for tomorrow (Wednesday), at the latest the day after tomorrow, an inspection in total safety directly on the glacier […] with canine units, it will be a group of up to twenty people”.
“Important finds, not just bones, are first photographed, then picked up and picked up by helicopter” and taken to Canazei where they are “listed and stored in a cold room”, he said, citing in particular “bones with bits of flesh, a piece of hand with a ring, tattoos, anything that can help identify a person”, including shoes, backpacks or ice axes.
Specialized technicians are also mobilized to install near a refuge “radar capable of detecting very fast movements, such as avalanches, and slower ones, such as landslides”, indicated Nicola Casagli on the spot. professor of applied geology at the University of Florence quoted by the AGI agency.
The disaster, which occurred the day after a record temperature of 10°C at the top of the glacier, in the midst of an early heat wave on the Italian peninsula, “symbolizes the so many tragedies that unchecked climate change is causing in so many regions of the world. “commented Italian President Sergio Mattarella on Tuesday.
A Czech among the victims
Only three of the seven mountaineers killed have been identified, but their nationalities have not been released by Italian authorities. The Czech Foreign Ministry nevertheless confirmed to AFP that one of its nationals was among the deceased victims.
The Trento public prosecutor’s office has opened an investigation to determine the causes of this tragedy.
The glacier collapsed near the locality Punta Rocca, along the route normally taken to reach its summit.
La Marmolada, nicknamed “the queen of the Dolomites”, is the largest glacier in this mountain range in northern Italy, which is part of the Alps. Located in Trentino, it gives birth to the Avisio River and overlooks Lake Fedaia.
According to the report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) published on March 1, the melting of ice and snow is one of the ten major threats caused by global warming, disrupting ecosystems and threatening certain infrastructures. .