Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ice Climber Missing In Banff National Park Was On Military Exercise: Spokeswoman

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Feb, 2015 01:18 PM
    LAKE LOUISE, Alta. — A search and rescue technician with the Canadian military is missing in Banff National Park after being swept away in an avalanche.
     
    Media reports have identified him as Sgt. Mark Salesse, 44, of 17 Wing at Canadian Forces Base Winnipeg.
     
    Capt. Bettina McCulloch-Drake says a soldier was on a routine mountain training exercise Thursday when he was caught in an avalanche.
     
    She says they are hopeful he is found safe, but adds they've been told the weather is "problematic."
     
    Parks Canada, who is leading the search, says an "incident" occurred on the Polar Circus ice-climbing route.
     
    It says searchers were unable to get to the area on Thursday night due to avalanche hazard, deteriorating weather and nightfall.
     
    Parks Canada says it was trying to do a helicopter search of the area on Friday because a ground search was impossible due to avalanche conditions.
     
    "At the moment we are hopeful he will be found safe," McCulloch-Drake said Friday, declining to confirm any details about the military member's identity.
     
    A dog handler and searchers from Parks Canada Banff, Yoho, Kootenay and Jasper are involved in the search.
     
    According to a military news release in 2011, Salesse was badly injured during another training exercise that year when he fell from an ice wall near Ouray, Colo.
     
    At the time, Salesse was with 5 Wing Goose Bay, N.L. He suffered injuries to his lower back, ribs, leg and pelvis.
     
    Salesse was also stationed for a time at CFB Comox in British Columbia, and has been a member of the Governor General's Foot Guards in Ottawa. He won a Governor General's Medal for bravery for service in Croatia.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Investigate Apparent Murder Of 55-year-old Woman In Vancouver Island Home

    Police Investigate Apparent Murder Of 55-year-old Woman In Vancouver Island Home
    LADYSMITH, B.C. — Police in Ladysmith, B.C., are investigating the apparent murder of a 55-year-old woman.

    Police Investigate Apparent Murder Of 55-year-old Woman In Vancouver Island Home

    Gordie Howe's family mourns younger brother's death days before celebrity dinner

    Gordie Howe's family mourns younger brother's death days before celebrity dinner
    SASKATOON — Gordie Howe's family is grieving after the hockey legend's younger brother died just days before the family will gather in Saskatoon.

    Gordie Howe's family mourns younger brother's death days before celebrity dinner

    Former Arctic priest Eric Dejaeger sentenced to 19 years for sex offences

    Former Arctic priest Eric Dejaeger sentenced to 19 years for sex offences
    IQALUIT, Nunavut — A defrocked Arctic priest was sentenced to 19 years in prison for dozens of horrendous sex offences against Inuit children, while his victims received a plea from the sentencing judge.

    Former Arctic priest Eric Dejaeger sentenced to 19 years for sex offences

    RCMP Warned B.C. Government Budget Cuts Would Hamper Highway Of Tears Probe

    RCMP Warned B.C. Government Budget Cuts Would Hamper Highway Of Tears Probe
    VANCOUVER — The RCMP's highest ranking member in B.C. warned the provincial government last year that cutting its budget would hamper its ability to investigate missing and murdered women along the so-called Highway of Tears.

    RCMP Warned B.C. Government Budget Cuts Would Hamper Highway Of Tears Probe

    TransCanada CEO says EPA's call for further Keystone XL review a delay tactic

    TransCanada CEO says EPA's call for further Keystone XL review a delay tactic
    TORONTO — TransCanada's chief executive says suggestions that the environmental impacts of the Keystone XL pipeline be revisited in light of lower crude prices is merely a tactic to delay the project.

    TransCanada CEO says EPA's call for further Keystone XL review a delay tactic

    Company's Offices Searched As Part Of Investigation Into B.C. Mine Disaster

    Company's Offices Searched As Part Of Investigation Into B.C. Mine Disaster
    VANCOUVER — The B.C. Conservation Service has searched two offices of the company that owns the Mount Polley mine as part of an investigation into a tailings pond spill that gushed millions of cubic metres of wastewater into streams and rivers.

    Company's Offices Searched As Part Of Investigation Into B.C. Mine Disaster