Disasters
After the accident in Zermatt: danger of avalanches still high
Exactly what experts had warned about happened in Zermatt: an avalanche broke out and killed at least three winter sports enthusiasts. The danger has not yet been averted.
On Riffelberg in Zermatt, four people were swept away by the masses of snow when a large avalanche occurred early Monday afternoon. Three people died and a fourth person was injured and taken to hospital. The police initially did not provide any information about the identity or condition of the injured person. Because there were no reports of missing persons, the rescuers assumed that there were no other people under the snow, as Zermatt’s rescue chief told the newspaper “Blick”.
The increased danger situation was already apparent due to the weather conditions over the Easter days. A lot of snow had fallen at altitude and at the same time there were sometimes hurricane-force winds. This resulted in large accumulations of drifted snow that are particularly prone to triggering. The danger of avalanches was also high in places in Austria and South Tyrol in Italy. Even with a downgrade to danger level three, avalanches could not be ruled out, as the experts announced in the evening: “Individual winter sports enthusiasts can trigger avalanches in places, even very large ones. Tours and off-piste runs require great caution and restraint.”
The accident happened in a variant area. There are no prepared and monitored slopes there, but winter sports enthusiasts ski in deep snow. This is where most avalanche accidents happen. Marked pistes are closed if there is a risk of avalanches above.