Iceland - Two people missing and two injured in ice cave collapse, Breiðamerkurjökull glacier, 25 August 2024

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Two people missing and two injured in ice cave collapse in Iceland​

Incident happened as tour group of 25 was visiting Breiðamerkurjökull glacier in south-east of country

[…]

“Four people got stuck under the ice, two people have already been rescued from the ice and are seriously injured,” Sudurland police said on Sunday.

“The search is still on for the two people trapped in the ice cave,” the statement continued.

Icelandic media reported that two helicopters from the country’s coastguard had been dispatched, and ambulances and police had also been called to the scene.

 
First responders received a call just before 15:00 local time (16:00 BST) on Sunday about the ice collapse in the Breidamerkurjökull glacier in the country's south.

[…]

Four people were hit by ice. Two were rescued with serious injuries, while rescuers were still searching for the other two as of 22:00 BST, according to local media.

Local news outlets reported that 200 people were working on the rescue operation that would continue into the night.

Police said in their press release around 18:00 that an ice cave had collapsed.

However, Icelandic news outlet Visir quoted Sveinn Kristján Rúnarsson, a senior police officer, as saying people were actually standing in a ravine between the cave mouths when an ice wall collapsed.


 
Sveinn Kristján Rúnarsson, chief police officer, told local news website RUV that all rescue work was being carried out by hand and that so far, no contact has been made with the two missing persons.

[…]

Around 100 people are reportedly working on the rescue operation, including all rescue services in Suðurland and the capital area.

[…]

Hjördís Guðmundsdóttir, communications manager for Civil Defence, has said the conditions on the glacier are extremely difficult.

According to RUV, one man — who did not want to be named — said the cave was not that deep, about three to five metres.

Around ten minutes after his tour group had left the cave they heard a crash but did not think any more of it until they went back to their hotel.

The glacier where the accident happened is near the glacial lagoon Jokulsarlon, one of the Iceland's more popular tourist destinations.

 
Sadly one tourist has been confirmed dead, two people remain trapped and one tourist has been injured but is in a stable condition.

 
The search for the two missing tourists has been called off for the day as it has become too dark and the conditions are too difficult to work in.

[…]

An emergency aid centre was opened in Hofgarð in Öræfi yesterday evening.

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Rescuers have resumed the search for the missing in the Breidamerkurjökull glacier after suspending the operation overnight because of difficult conditions.

[…]

While the conditions were "difficult", the weather was "fair", [Chief Superintendent Rúnarsson] said on Sunday night.

Confirming that all those involved were foreign tourists, he said there was nothing to suggest that the trip to the cave should not have taken place.

"Ice cave tours happen almost the whole year," he said.

"These are experienced and powerful mountain guides who run these trips. It's always possible to be unlucky. I trust these people to assess the situation - when it's safe or not safe to go, and good work has been done there over time. This is a living land, so anything can happen."

The police chief was quoted as saying that people had been standing in a ravine between cave mouths when an ice wall collapsed.

 
Rescue effort at ice cave in Iceland ends after police say no one is missing

After a 17-hour, 200-person rescue operation in which first responders used chainsaws and ice picks to cut through a collapsed ice cave to track down two missing tourists, police in Iceland have called off the search and said they now believe that no one had ever been missing.

Officials in Iceland said on Monday that after examining tour operator records, they had concluded that 23 people were on the tour, not 25 as had been previously reported.

The conclusion echoed what rescuers had found at the scene, police noted. “A moment ago, the police field manager located at the scene announced that all the ice that was thought to have fallen on the people had been moved,” police said on social media. “It has come to light that no one was hidden under the ice.’’

 

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