February 18, 2021
ISLAMABAD: The family of Pakistani mountaineer Ali Sadpara Thursday declared him and two other missing foreign climbers dead.
The announcement was made by Ali Sadpara's son, Sajid Sadpara, in Skardu. "I will keep my father’s mission alive and fulfil his dream," he said.
Read more: After 72 hours, K2 search for missing mountaineers continues as weather gets harsher
He also thanked Prime Minister Imran Khan, Chief of the Army Staff General Qamar Javed Bajwa and the courageous pilots of the Askari Aviation for conducting a thorough search and rescue operation amid the harsh weather for his father.
Sadpara, Iceland's John Snorri and Chile's Juan Pablo Mohr had departed for their journey on February 3 after Sadpara's birthday, asking fans and admirers to "keep us in your prayers".
Read more: Search operation on K2 for Ali Sadpara, other mountaineers enters third day
They had started their attempt for the final summit in the early hours of February 5 , hoping to accomplish the herculean feat by afternoon.
According to updates posted on Snorri's facebook account on Friday, at 12:29pm, the GPS stopped working and had not updated in six hours.
Ali Sadpara's management revealed a few days ago that the government and other stakeholders were employing their best efforts to find Sadpara and the other climbers who went missing, despite him being missing for almost 10 days.
Read more: Govt, stakeholders 'still employing best efforts' to find Ali Sadpara, other missing climbers
Sadpara's management, which operates his official Twitter account, on Monday announced that a meeting of the apex committee regarding the missing climbers' search and rescue (SAR) operation will be held on Feb 17, 2021, in Gilgit.
"Please avoid any premature statements and keep away from fake reports," the management had said.