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Added on the 16/10/2014 22:37:07 - Copyright : Euronews EN
Residents continue living in fear one month after a massive and deadly earthquake in Nepal. Julie Noce reports.
Dramatic video shows the Everest Base Camp as an avalanche triggered by the Nepal earthquake hits, killing at least 18 people and trapping dozens in the icy terrain north of the base camp. Jillian Kitchener reports.
Images show the rubble of houses destroyed in the 5.6-magnitude earthquake that killed at least 132 people in Nepal. The quake hit the far west of the Himalayan country and was measured by the US Geological Survey at just 18 kilometres (11 miles) deep. IMAGES
Images of the aftermath of the collapse of part of the Marmolada glacier, the largest in the Italian Alps, which has left at least six dead and eight injured. The disaster struck after a record-high temperature of 10 degrees Celsius (50 degrees Fahrenheit) was recorded at the glacier's summit. IMAGES
Kathmandu, Feb 9 (EFE/EPA).- Poor weather conditions prevented rescue operations on Tuesday for three climbers who went missing last week on Mt. K2 (8,611 meters) during an expedition on the world's second highest peak."The helicopters are ready to flight. We are waiting for the good weather," Alpine Club of Pakistan's secretary Karrar Haidri told EFE.He said that the military helicopters have not taken off for the search of Chile's Juan Pablo Mohr, Iceland's John Snorri and Pakistan's Ali Sadpara since the previous day due to bad weather. (Camera: ARCHIVE).SHOT LIST: ARCHIVE FOOTAGE OF MT. K2 CLIMBERS IN KATHMANDU, NEPAL.
Kathmandu, Oct 21 (EFE/EPA).- At a time when the Himalayas have been closed to mountaineers for more than seven months due to the coronavirus pandemic, Nepal opened its peaks to the prince of Bahrain and his million-dollar expedition.Prince Nasser bin Hamad Al Khalifa and the rest of the group, 15 Bahraini Royal Guards and three British nationals, successfully scaled Mount Manaslu, the eighth highest mountain in the world at 8,163 meters (26,782 feet), on Oct. 15, two days before the country officially opened for mountaineers around the world.(Camera: NARENDRA SHRESTHA)SHOT LIST: B-ROLL OF SHEIKH MOHAMMED BIN HAMAD BIN KHALIKA AL THANI IN KATHMANDU, NEPAL.