Hopes fade for French climbers missing in Himalayas

A rescue helicopter flies over the site of an avalanche on Ama Dablam mountain in the Everest region, some 140 km northeast of Katmandu, where three French climbers went missing, Nov. 1, 2021. (AFP)
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Updated 02 November 2021
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Hopes fade for French climbers missing in Himalayas

  • The trio, who were attempting to scale Mingbo Eiger, a 6,000-meter peak near Mount Everest, Nepal, were last heard from via satellite phone on Oct. 26
  • The three young climbers have been named as Thomas Arfi, Louis Pachoud and Gabriel Miloche and were part of an eight-strong expedition

KATMANDU: Hopes faded Monday for three French climbers missing in the Himalayas after an avalanche, with their national climbing federation putting the chances of finding them alive at “practically zero.”
The trio were attempting to scale Mingbo Eiger, a 6,000-meter (19,700-feet) peak near Mount Everest in Nepal, and were last heard from via satellite phone from their camp on October 26.
The French Federation of Alpine and Mountain Clubs (FFCAM) said Monday that the men appeared to have abandoned their summit attempt and turned back when the avalanche hit.
“At the bottom of the cliff face, rescuers found three bags and equipment from their bivouac,” the FFCAM said in a statement.
“Hopes of finding survivors are at present practically zero.”
Mingma Gyalje Sherpa, a member of the search and rescue team mobilized by the Nepal National Mountain Guides Association, said however that the operation, hampered by poor weather, would continue on Tuesday.
“We studied the location where they were said to be last spotted, and looked around the area. So far, there is nothing to share,” he told AFP.
The three young climbers, named as Thomas Arfi, Louis Pachoud and Gabriel Miloche, were part of an eight-strong expedition. They had split into two groups to tackle different summits.
The FFCAM also rejected claims in local media that they did not have proper permits.
Climbers have started returning to Nepal after the pandemic forced a complete shutdown of its mountaineering industry last year and devastated the tourism-dependent economy.
The Himalayan nation of 30 million people re-opened to tourists and scrapped quarantine requirements for vaccinated foreigners in September.


South Korea’s ex-President Yoon faces potential death sentence request in trial

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South Korea’s ex-President Yoon faces potential death sentence request in trial

  • Prosecutors allege Yoon sought to brand political opponents — including then-opposition leader Lee Jae Myung — as “anti-state forces” and detain them

SEOUL: South Korea’s special prosecutor is ​expected to make a sentencing request for former president Yoon Suk Yeol on charges of insurrection over his brief imposition of martial law in 2024, as a lower court trial convened on Friday for its final session. Yoon, who is accused of masterminding an insurrection, could face the death penalty or life in prison under South Korean law if found guilty. South Korea has followed an unofficial moratorium for nearly 30 years and ‌has not executed ‌a death-row inmate since 1997.
In hearings at the ‌Seoul ⁠Central ​District ‌Court, prosecutors have alleged Yoon and then-defense minister, Kim Yong-hyun, began devising a scheme as far back as October 2023 to suspend parliament and take over legislative powers.
Prosecutors allege Yoon sought to brand political opponents — including then-opposition leader Lee Jae Myung — as “anti-state forces” and detain them. The then president and Kim also tried to manufacture a pretext for martial law by escalating tensions with North ⁠Korea through a covert drone operation, prosecutors have said.
While the botched bid to impose martial law ‌lasted only about six hours, it sent shockwaves ‍through Asia’s fourth-largest economy, a key ‍US security ally and long considered one of Asia’s most resilient democracies.
Yoon, ‍65, has denied the charges. The conservative has argued it was within his powers as president to declare martial law and that the action was aimed at sounding the alarm over opposition parties’ obstruction of government.
Dressed in a dark suit and ​white shirt and appearing noticeably thinner than at the start of the trial in February, Yoon sat with seven other defendants ⁠including Kim and legal counsel.
The session opened earlier than usual for defense arguments, followed by the prosecutors’ final arguments and sentencing requests relating to each of the defendants.
The court is expected to rule in February, capping more than a year of political upheaval following Yoon’s martial law declaration on December 3, 2024, which was revoked within hours after lawmakers scaled fences to break through a security cordon around the National Assembly to vote.
Yoon was later impeached and removed from office by the Constitutional Court and a snap presidential election in June last year brought liberal-leaning Lee Jae Myung to power.
Yoon faces a string ‌of other criminal charges, including obstructing the execution of an arrest warrant and abuse of power.