Space News from SpaceDaily.com
One hiker dead, hundreds rescued after heavy snowfall in China
ADVERTISEMENT


Beijing, Oct 6 (AFP) Oct 06, 2025
One hiker died and hundreds of others were rescued after sudden heavy snowfall on the Tibetan Plateau and near Mount Everest on the Chinese side, state media and hikers reported on Monday.

A young hiker nicknamed FeiFei, who was evacuated on Monday, told AFP she was on a multi-day trek with three friends and a local guide in the Karma Valley at the foot of Everest in Tibet at an altitude of nearly 5,000 metres (16,400 feet).

Heavy snowfall overnight Saturday to Sunday buried their camp.

"We had to constantly clear the snow from the tents, but I collapsed from exhaustion (...) and my tent got buried," said the young woman from eastern Jiangsu province.

She finally found refuge in another tent.

After two days of walking, during which "firefighters cleared the path using yaks and horses to clear the snow", the group returned to the rescue centre set up at the trailhead.

In the same valley, 350 other hikers had been rescued by Sunday evening, state broadcaster CCTV said.

But more than 200 others were still in high-altitude camps at that time.

FeiFei said she saw dozens of hikers along the way, some weakened by hunger or altitude, but none in critical condition.

Local authorities did not respond to AFP requests for information on the number of people still needing rescue.

In the mountains of neighbouring Qinghai province, a hiker died from hypothermia and altitude sickness, CCTV reported Monday.

More than 130 others were retrieved from the same region after hundreds of rescuers and two drones were deployed, it added.

Search efforts were ongoing to locate other hikers in the region, the report said, without specifying how many.

Outdoor enthusiasts have flocked to the country's famous beauty spots in recent days, taking advantage of an eight-day national holiday, but many have been caught out by unexpected extreme conditions.

Over the border in Nepal and India, landslides and floods triggered by heavy downpours have killed more than 70 people, officials said, as rescue workers struggled Monday to reach cut-off communities in remote mountainous terrain.


ADVERTISEMENT





Space News from SpaceDaily.com
SpaceX plans 11th test of Starship later this month from South Texas
Cassini proves complex chemistry in Enceladus ocean
Detection of phosphine in a brown dwarf atmosphere raises more questions

24/7 Energy News Coverage
China sends 11th group of internet satellites into orbit for global constellation
NASA ISRO radar satellite beams first Earth images from space
NRL coronagraph on NOAA SWFO L1 will enhance space weather forecasts

Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Maintaining US space dominance requires rapid and reliable delivery of new systems
Shield or Spark? The U.S. Golden Dome and the New Missile Arms Race
Starcloud partners with Mission Space to protect orbital datacenters with real time space weather intelligence

24/7 News Coverage
Vast reserves, but little to drink: Tajikistan's water struggles
Year after northern Nigeria floods, survivors left high and dry
Africa's path to low-carbon food security



All rights reserved. Copyright Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.