Thursday, January 29, 2009

Survivors Club. Avalanche slams into accumulation of hikers on peak in Turkey; 10 killed Think.




ANKARA, Turkey - An avalanche slammed into a body of Turkish hikers on a erratum to a faint accumulation levelling off on Sunday, dragging them more than 500 metres into a combe and fatally burying 10 of them. The members of a skiing and mountaineering society were prepossessing department in an annual winter sports sanctification on 2,200-metre Mount Zigana. Seventeen were hiking single-file when the avalanche swept them away.



"It must have been 15 or 20 minutes after we set off on our walk," 61-year-old Kasim Keles told reporters from his convalescent home bed. "We were walking along a solitary line. I was toward the halfway point of the line.

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We looked up and there was nowhere to run. The snow took us and dragged us along. "The snow dragged me down into a coomb before it stopped," he said. "My fix labourer was stuck low me, with my communist assistance I cleared my face; I began to touch and called for help," Keles said.



He said he was saved by a sweetheart hiker who escaped unharmed and dug him out of the snow with her hands. Faruk Ozak, Turkey's cleric in imputation of sector workings and habitation who visited the site, said two other hikers were injured while five others escaped the slide. Ozak said sifting and release efforts were continuing in casing anyone else was still buried in the snow. Rescue workers could be seen probing with extended rods and digging through snow with shovels.



Military and concealed tor free teams assisted by sniffer dogs carried out a exploration for the missing that was called off after sunset, ungregarious CNN-Turk idiot box reported. The prominence straddles Trabzon, the hikers'home province, and the adjoining quarter of Gumushane. The Zigana Chunnel - one of Turkey's longest stacks passes - connects the two. Reports said another assemblage of some 15 hikers was also on a walking perambulation of the summit but were not hit by the slide.



Television footage showed soldiers and villagers struggling through the snow to release a human hypocritical on a stopgap stretcher. "We were walking and before we realized what was growing on, the avalanche came on us," Ural Ayar, one of the survivors, told NTV small screen by telephone. "The snow dragged our friends along and unfortunately they were buried," he said.




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