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Mud and rock bury Swiss village after glacier collapse, one person missing

Mud and rock bury Swiss village after glacier collapse, one person missing

GENEVA: A huge chunk of a glacier in the Swiss Alps broke off on Wednesday, causing a deluge of ice, mud and rock that buried most of a mountain village that had been evacuated due to the risk of a rockslide, authorities said.
One person is currently missing, officials said.
Drone footage broadcast by Swiss national broadcaster SRF showed a vast plain of mud and soil completely covering part of the southwestern village of Blatten, the river running through it and the wooded sides of the surrounding valley.
'We've lost our village,' Matthias Bellwald, the mayor of Blatten told a press conference after the slide. 'The village is under rubble. We will rebuild.'
Stephane Ganzer, an official in the canton of Valais where Blatten is located, told Swiss media that about 90% of the village was covered by the landslide.
'An unbelievable amount of material thundered down into the valley,' said Matthias Ebener, a spokesperson for local authorities.
One person was missing, Ebener said. Officials gave no further details on the person during the press conference.
Officials said millions of cubic metres of rock and soil have tumbled down since Blatten was first evacuated this month when part of the mountain behind the glacier began to crumble, sparking warnings it could bring the ice mass down with it.
A video shared widely on social media showed the dramatic moment when the glacier partially collapsed, creating a huge cloud that covered part of the mountain as rock and debris came cascading down towards the village.
Experts consulted by Reuters said it was difficult to assess the extent to which rising temperatures spurred by climate change had triggered the collapse because of the role the crumbling mountainside had played.
Christian Huggel, a professor of environment and climate at the University of Zurich, said while various factors were at play in Blatten, it was known that local permafrost had been affected by warmer temperatures in the Alps.
The loss of permafrost can negatively affect the stability of the mountain rock which is why climate change had likely played a part in the deluge, Huggel said.
The extent of the damage to Blatten had no precedent in the Swiss Alps in the current or previous century, he added.
The rubble of shattered wooden buildings could be seen on the flanks of the huge mass of earth in the drone footage.
At least four killed and 17 trapped in China landslides: state media
Buildings and infrastructure in Blatten, whose roughly 300 inhabitants were evacuated on May 19 after geologists identified the risk of an imminent avalanche of rock and ice from above, were battered by the rockslide, officials said.
SRF said houses were destroyed in the village nestled in the Loetschental valley in southern Switzerland.
Swiss President Karin Keller-Sutter expressed her solidarity with the local population as emergency services warned people the area was hazardous and urged them to stay away, closing off the main road into the valley.
'It's terrible to lose your home,' Keller-Sutter said on X.

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Blatten Switzerland: Alpine village largely destroyed after Swiss glacier collapses
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Blatten Switzerland: Alpine village largely destroyed after Swiss glacier collapses

A vast section of glacier collapsed onto the slopes of a southern Swiss mountain on Wednesday, unleashing a torrent of rock, ice and mud that submerged most of the Alpine village of Blatten in the Lötschental valley. Authorities had evacuated the community weeks earlier, yet a 64-year-old man is now missing and rescue operations using thermal drones are under way. Footage shared on social media and Swiss broadcasters depicted a dramatic deluge of brown sludge engulfing buildings and coating the village in debris. According to Stephane Ganzer, head of security for the Valais region, "about 90% of the village is covered or destroyed" in what he called "a major catastrophe." The regional government confirmed that a significant mass of the Birch Glacier above Blatten had broken away, triggering the slide. The debris also blocked the Lonza River, heightening fears of additional flooding should the natural dam break. 'There's a risk that the situation could get worse,' Ganzer said, noting the river's blockage and potential instability. A huge mass of rock and ice from a glacier thundered down a Swiss mountainside on Wednesday, sending plumes of dust skyward and coating with mud nearly all of an Alpine village that authorities had evacuated earlier this month as a precaution. Video on social media and Swiss TV… — We The Media (@WeTheMedia17) May 29, 2025 In a statement, Swiss Environment Minister Albert Rösti described the event as "extraordinary" and pledged federal support for affected villagers. Local officials and crisis teams have been deployed by air to assess damage. Roughly 300 residents and all livestock were evacuated earlier this month amid concerns that the glacier's mass — estimated at 1.5 million cubic metres — was increasingly unstable. The Swiss Army had already been mobilised as glacial movement accelerated. The incident underscores growing concern among glaciologists over the rapid melting and retreat of Switzerland's glaciers, driven by climate change. The country lost 4% of its glacier volume in 2023 alone, following a record 6% reduction in 2022 — the two largest declines ever recorded. Switzerland, home to more glaciers than any other European country, has faced similar threats in recent years. In 2023, residents of Brienz narrowly escaped disaster when a rockslide stopped just short of their village. The area has been evacuated multiple times since. The situation in Blatten remains precarious, with emergency crews working against the clock to locate the missing man and stabilise the area.

Mud and rock bury Swiss village after glacier collapse, one person missing
Mud and rock bury Swiss village after glacier collapse, one person missing

Business Recorder

timea day ago

  • Business Recorder

Mud and rock bury Swiss village after glacier collapse, one person missing

GENEVA: A huge chunk of a glacier in the Swiss Alps broke off on Wednesday, causing a deluge of ice, mud and rock that buried most of a mountain village that had been evacuated due to the risk of a rockslide, authorities said. One person is currently missing, officials said. Drone footage broadcast by Swiss national broadcaster SRF showed a vast plain of mud and soil completely covering part of the southwestern village of Blatten, the river running through it and the wooded sides of the surrounding valley. 'We've lost our village,' Matthias Bellwald, the mayor of Blatten told a press conference after the slide. 'The village is under rubble. We will rebuild.' Stephane Ganzer, an official in the canton of Valais where Blatten is located, told Swiss media that about 90% of the village was covered by the landslide. 'An unbelievable amount of material thundered down into the valley,' said Matthias Ebener, a spokesperson for local authorities. One person was missing, Ebener said. Officials gave no further details on the person during the press conference. Officials said millions of cubic metres of rock and soil have tumbled down since Blatten was first evacuated this month when part of the mountain behind the glacier began to crumble, sparking warnings it could bring the ice mass down with it. A video shared widely on social media showed the dramatic moment when the glacier partially collapsed, creating a huge cloud that covered part of the mountain as rock and debris came cascading down towards the village. Experts consulted by Reuters said it was difficult to assess the extent to which rising temperatures spurred by climate change had triggered the collapse because of the role the crumbling mountainside had played. Christian Huggel, a professor of environment and climate at the University of Zurich, said while various factors were at play in Blatten, it was known that local permafrost had been affected by warmer temperatures in the Alps. The loss of permafrost can negatively affect the stability of the mountain rock which is why climate change had likely played a part in the deluge, Huggel said. The extent of the damage to Blatten had no precedent in the Swiss Alps in the current or previous century, he added. The rubble of shattered wooden buildings could be seen on the flanks of the huge mass of earth in the drone footage. At least four killed and 17 trapped in China landslides: state media Buildings and infrastructure in Blatten, whose roughly 300 inhabitants were evacuated on May 19 after geologists identified the risk of an imminent avalanche of rock and ice from above, were battered by the rockslide, officials said. SRF said houses were destroyed in the village nestled in the Loetschental valley in southern Switzerland. Swiss President Karin Keller-Sutter expressed her solidarity with the local population as emergency services warned people the area was hazardous and urged them to stay away, closing off the main road into the valley. 'It's terrible to lose your home,' Keller-Sutter said on X.

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