Race to Save Woman Stuck 22,000ft up Victory Peak with Broken Leg and No Food - The Mirror
9 Articles
9 Articles
Russian mountaineer Natalia Nagovitsyna is waiting for a rescue at more than 7,000 meters, at the Pobeda peak, in Kyrgyzstan, for eight days, when she suffered an accident at the descent from the top and broke her leg, according to the Russian portal Meduza. Nagovitsyna, 47 years old, remains in a situation to the limit, but adverse weather conditions are complicating rescue operations.Keep reading...
Race to save woman stuck 22,000ft up Victory Peak with broken leg and no food - The Mirror
Avid thrill seeker Natalia Nagovitsina has been stuck up Victory Peak in Kyrgyzstan for about a week after she suffered a significant injury and needed a sleeping bag to be delivered to her
A 47-year-old Russian climber, Natalia Nagovicin, broke her leg when she was down from the peak of victory (7,439 metres) in Kyrgyzstan and has been waiting for a week for assistance at an altitude of 7,000 metres, reporting to Russian silovists the Mash and 112 television channels. According to their data, the climber remains at the top without food and almost no water.
While trying to rescue the 47-year-old Russian woman, one of her companions died, whose body was left on the mountain, and two others were evacuated by helicopter to hospital. The woman was last seen in drone footage taken on Tuesday, but she was not moving, the popular Russian newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda wrote on its website on Wednesday. Natalya Nagovitsynova: Natalya, along with two Russian climbers and a German and Italian colleague, succ…
Russian alpinist Natalya Nagovitsyna (47) has been waiting for a week with a broken leg, dwindling supplies of water and food, and in minus 20 degrees Celsius for help on the highest mountain in the Tien Shan range in Kyrgyzstan, the 7,439-meter-high Chingish Chokusu (formerly Pik Pobedy). One of her companions died while trying to rescue her, and his body was left on the mountain, while two others were evacuated by helicopter to hospital.
The 47-year-old mountaineer, with a broken leg, survives at Pico Pobeda while bad weather delays her evacuation
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 100% of the sources lean Left
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium




