«Je pensais que j’allais mourir» : l’alpiniste népalais, qui a survécu six jours seul sur les pentes de l’Everest, a «rongé de la glace» pour survivre
AI Summary
Dawa Sherpa, 57, a Nepali mountaineer missing since May 30 on Mount Everest's upper slopes, was discovered alive on June 4 and is recovering in hospital. His family, initially believing him dead, has demanded an investigation into why rescue teams failed to locate him during his six-day survival ordeal in which he chewed ice and rationed chocolates. The incident has prompted calls for legal action and a formal probe into rescue protocols.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets emphasize abandonment and potential negligence, with headlines and reporting highlighting the family's assertion that rescue teams could have done more to locate him sooner.
Moderate: Centrist outlets balance the miraculous survival with the family's legitimate grievance, giving substantial weight to both the remarkable discovery and the investigation demands.
Conservative: Conservative-leaning outlets focus on Sherpa's resourcefulness and survival instincts (chewing ice, eating found chocolates), highlighting dramatic elements like the family preparing last rites, and frame the incident primarily as a remarkable survival story.
Dawa Sherpa, 57 ans, a été retrouvé vivant non loin du camp de base du sommet le plus haut de la planète (8849 m), qu’il avait atteint avec Chris Thrall le 29 mai.
Les routes des deux grimpeurs s’étaient séparées le lendemain pendant leur descente. ...