Spanish cavers die in Morocco’s Atlas mountains

Two dead after three potholers spend days trapped in deep underground ravine

Rescue workers carry a rescued Spanish caver to a clinic in Ouarzazate on Sunday. Only one of three Spanish cavers trapped at the bottom of a deep ravine in Morocco’s High Atlas mountains was extracted alive after spending days trapped underground. Photograph: Fadel Senna/AFP/Getty Images
Rescue workers carry a rescued Spanish caver to a clinic in Ouarzazate on Sunday. Only one of three Spanish cavers trapped at the bottom of a deep ravine in Morocco’s High Atlas mountains was extracted alive after spending days trapped underground. Photograph: Fadel Senna/AFP/Getty Images

The sole survivor among three Spanish cavers trapped for days at the bottom of a deep ravine in Morocco’s High Atlas mountains has been freed following days spent trapped underground.

The trio were part of a group of nine Spaniards who had split up last Sunday to explore different caves and were later due to meet up in Ouarzazate in southern Morocco.

Twenty-seven-year-old policeman Juan Bolivar was admitted to the private Chifa clinic in Ouarzazate, southern Morocco, on Sunday night.

A military plane arrives from the Moroccan capital Rabat at an airport in Ouarzazate  during the rescue operation for the Spanish cavers in Morocco’s High Atlas mountains. Photograph: Fadel Senna/AFP/Getty Images
A military plane arrives from the Moroccan capital Rabat at an airport in Ouarzazate during the rescue operation for the Spanish cavers in Morocco’s High Atlas mountains. Photograph: Fadel Senna/AFP/Getty Images

With eyes closed and bandages on his legs, Mr Bolivar was transported from the scene by police and taken into the clinic on a stretcher.

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All three potholers were initially found alive on Saturday morning, several days after they had gone missing after breaking off from a group of nine Spaniards to explore different caves.

But officials said late Saturday that one man - 41-year-old Gustavo Virues - had died as rescue workers scrambled to reach the trio at the bottom of the 400-metre-deep (1,320-foot) ravine in an area where access is difficult and a helicopter cannot land.

Officials in Ouarzazate had said the other two men had been injured and had received first aid ahead of their planned evacuation.

However the Spanish interior ministry announced late on Sunday that Jose Antonio Martinez (41) had also died while awaiting rescue.

"My condolences to the family and friends of Jose Antonio Martinez, a chief police inspector who died in Morocco," the ministry said in a message on Twitter signed by Interior Minister Jorge Fernandez Diaz.

Mr Martinez had broken his legs and suffered a head injury, his wife told Spanish public television station TVE.

TVE, quoting Moroccan rescue workers, said one of the three had possibly slipped on a patch of ice, dragging the other two down with him as he fell.

Fellow cavers raised the alarm on Tuesday after the trio failed to show up in Ouarzazate as planned after splitting from the group on Sunday.

The three were located by Moroccan search teams in the commune of Tarmest, but heavy fog on Saturday hindered the rescue operation, officials said, adding that the men had not been accompanied by professional guides.

But Mr Virues's cousin Victor Rengel told TVE that the deceased lawyer and father-of-two was an experienced caver who had even taken part in rescue operations.

The area the men were exploring is rugged terrain which includes peaks of around 4,000 metres still covered with snow from winter.

Ouarzazate lies to the south of the High Atlas range on the edge of the Sahara desert, about 510 kilometres (320 miles) by road from the capital Rabat.

AFP