Frostbitten Italian hobbles, aided down K2
The team were trying to bring him down to an altitude that would be safe for a helicopter to airlift him off the mountain. "He's on his way to the Advance Base Camp (ABC)," said retired Brigadier Mohammad Akram, vice president of Pakistan's Adventure Foundation.
Akram expected the party to reach the camp, at 6,000 metres, by around 09:30 a.m. (0330 GMT).
"He couldn't make it during the night as he was completed exhausted," Akram said. "His feet have become swollen and his boots are now so tight on him."
Akram said despite pain and exhaustion, the climber's inner strength shone through.
"He's struggling, he is weak, but he is in good spirit."
Confortola spoke by satellite telephone to a fellow-climber back in Italy on Monday.
"Of course, of course, I'll keep going. Imagine if I gave up now," he told Agostino Da Polenza, head of the Ev-K2-CNR mountaineering group. (Reporting by Kamran Haider; Writing by Simon Cameron-Moore; Editing by Valerie Lee)










