New Zealand police find equipment from missing US, Canadian climbers


  • World
  • Tuesday, 03 Dec 2024

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Rescue teams looking for three climbers who went missing on New Zealand's highest mountain have found equipment belonging to the trio, police said on Tuesday, as a second day of searching was paused due to bad weather.

U.S. nationals Kurt Blair, 56, and Carlos Romero, 50, and a Canadian man flew by helicopter on Saturday to a camp on Mount Cook, or Aoraki, with plans to summit the 3,724 metre (12,218 ft) mountain.

The three men did not show up for their return flight on Monday morning, triggering the search-and-rescue effort.

Police have withheld details of the Canadian national until authorities can contact his family.

A search on Monday unearthed several climbing-related items which police believe belonged to the trio. Bad weather will likely force rescuers to delay a further search until Thursday, police said.

Police are working with the U.S. and Canadian embassies to inform and support the families of the three men.

(Reporting by Lewis Jackson; Editing by Nicholas Yong)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

Landslides in Indonesia's Central Java kill at least 18; dozens missing
Russian air defence units destroy 36 Ukrainian drones overnight, defence ministry says
Thousands of anti-graft protesters take to streets of Philippines capital for second day
Trump reverses stance on Epstein files, urges Republicans to vote for releasing them
US Border Patrol arrests 81 on first day of Charlotte immigration crackdown
Three killed, 10 wounded in Russian missile strike on Kharkiv region, Ukraine says
Measure to allow foreign military bases in Ecuador fails in vote
Asbestos contamination forces schools in Australia, New Zealand to close
Landslide kills 6 bus passengers in central Vietnam
Australia rules out co-hosting climate summit with Turkey

Others Also Read