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London schoolboy clings on to mountain near Mont Blanc for 10 hours after watching father plunge to death

The 15-year-old could not be rescued in dense fog but was eventually taken off Les Droites with hypothermia

Lizzie Dearden
Saturday 24 October 2015 11:19 EDT
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The boy was rescued after spending the night on the mountainside.
The boy was rescued after spending the night on the mountainside. (AFP/Getty Images)

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A schoolboy has survived a night clinging on to an icy rockface near Mont Blanc after seeing his father plunge to his death.

The pair, said to be Americans living in London, were climbing down the notoriously treacherous Les Droites mountain on Wednesday evening when the accident happened.

They had reached 3,700 metres when the 61-year-old father fell down his rope at around 9pm, Le Dauphiné Libéré reported.

The pair were climbing Les Droites, in the Mont Blanc massif
The pair were climbing Les Droites, in the Mont Blanc massif (AFP/Getty Images)

Stephane Bozon, commander of the Chamonix mountain police, said the man fell around 40 metres to his death.

His 15-year-old son raised the alarm but it was impossible for rescuers to reach him in thick fog. A helicopter eventually took him off the mountain more than 10 hours later, at 7.30am the next day.

France 3 Alpes reported that the teenager had stayed in contact with the emergency services through the night and was found uninjured but suffering from mild hypothermia.

His father’s body was recovered from the valley below.

Seven climbers died in an avalance in teh French Alps last month
Seven climbers died in an avalance in teh French Alps last month (AFP/Getty Images)

Another woman died in the French Alps on Friday. The 76-year-old fell from a path while walking in the Mont Blanc massif with her husband and two children, local media reported.

The accidents came after a series of deaths on the range that prompted a warning against treating it as an “amusement park”.

An American climber who tried to break a world record by taking his children, aged nine and 11, up Mont Blanc spared outrage last year, when they were almost killed in an avalanche.

Patrick Sweeney said he had no regrets about the climb, adding: “It’s a heck of a lot better than having them sitting at home wasting their minds on Minecraft or TV or something like that.”

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