Nine skiers survived a major avalanche high in the Swiss Alps on Saturday, emerging with only light to moderate injuries.
All nine were found by rescuers and airlifed to hospital, police said.
The avalanche was triggered near the summit of the Alphubel mountain in the Saas-Fee area of the south-western Wallis canton, close to the Italian border.
The site is near Switzerland’s iconic Matterhorn mountain and Zermatt ski resort.
“While groups of varying sizes were on the Alphubel at an altitude of 4,000 metres [13,000ft], an avalanche was triggered. Several were swept away by the mass of snow,” a Wallis police statement said.
Emergency services quickly went to the scene in several helicopters.
A Wallis police spokesperson told AFP that there were 16 people ski touring in the area, all of whom were taken off the mountain.
Nine were airlifted to hospitals in the nearby towns of Visp and Sion. Of those, three were able to leave after outpatient treatment and the others were being kept in overnight under observation.
“We’re talking about very light injuries so it’s looking positive,” the police spokesperson said. “They were very lucky, we can say that.”
The other seven people on the mountain were uninjured but were also airlifted off.
The police are not aware of any other people unaccounted for.
Emergency rescue services were on alert in the Wallis Alps due to the high numbers of winter sports enthusiasts taking advantage of the favourable weather over the Easter holiday long weekend.
Switzerland’s Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research said the avalanche risk for Saturday was moderate in southern Wallis.
Fifteen people have died in avalanches in Switzerland from 1 October 2022 to 31 March this year, while one person remains missing, the SLF said. The figure is close to the 20-year average of 17 deaths.