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Mountaineers of the ITBP on Thursday, 13 June, launched an over a week-long expedition from Pithorgarh in Uttarakhand to retrieve the mortal remains of at least eight climbers who were killed last month in an avalanche near an unscaled peak adjoining Nanda Devi East.
"A team of 11 specially chosen personnel of the force, many of whom have conquered the Mount Everest and other peaks, today began their operation to retrieve the mortal remains of the climbers," Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITPBP) spokesperson Vivek Kumar Pandey said.
"The personnel, led by our second-in-command rank officer Ratan Singh Sonal, will be aided by other ground teams and will trek over a 100 kilometres to finally reach the site where the bodies of the climbers were last spotted," he said.
Pandey said the team of the ITBP, a border guarding force tasked to guard the China border, is expected to reach the base camp in a week and after required acclimatisation, it will attempt to retrieve the bodies.
Eight mountaineers, including from the US, the UK and Australia, were reported missing after they left Munsiyari on 13 May to scale the 7,434 metre tall peak, but did not return to the base camp on the scheduled date of 25 May.
The team was led by British mountaineer Martin Moran.
The missing mountaineers comprised seven from the UK, the US and Australia, and a liaison officer from Delhi's Indian Mountaineering Foundation.
The route to the peak begins from Munsiyari, about 132 km from Pithrogarh district headquarters. The district is about 456 km from state capital Dehradun.
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