Rescuers bring down bodies found on Japan's Mount Fuji

Yuri Kageyama
AP
Cold temperatures and altitude sickness are risks for the thousands who scale Mount Fuji every year. (AP PHOTO)
Cold temperatures and altitude sickness are risks for the thousands who scale Mount Fuji every year. (AP PHOTO) Credit: AAP

Three bodies have been found inside a crater at the summit of Mount Fuji, with one of them already brought down from the slopes of Japan’s most famous mountain.

An effort to bring back the two other bodies would continue on Friday or later, depending on weather conditions, officials said.

A search was called off for Thursday because of forecast heavy rain.

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The identities of the people, including gender or age, were not confirmed.

It’s unclear whether they were climbing the 3776-metre mountain together, as the bodies were found several metres apart.

The official climbing season had not yet started when the climbers entered the mountain from the Shizuoka Prefecture side.

Japanese media reports showed a vehicle with one of the bodies driving into a police station in Shizuoka Prefecture.

The rescue team had been searching for a 53-year-old man for whom a missing person report was filed.

Separately, Kyodo News service said professional climber Keita Kurakami, 38, died in a hospital after being found by police while climbing Fuji from the Yamanashi Prefecture side of the mountain.

Fuji can be climbed from both Yamanashi and Shizuoka prefectures.

The climbing season kicks in for Yamanashi starting on July 1.

Mount Fuji is Japan’s highest peak and a popular tourist destination.

It has long been an iconic symbol of Japan, with its gracefully sweeping slopes and white icy cap that stand out amid tranquil lakes and rice fields.

Experts warn it can get extremely cold, even in the summer, and proper gear, climbing boots and clothing are crucial.

Trekkers are also at risk of altitude sickness if they ascend too quickly.

As many as 300,000 people climb Fuji every year, and watching the sunrise from the mountaintop is coveted as a spiritual experience.

But worries have been growing lately about overcrowding from the influx of tourists.

The town of Fujikawaguchiko in Yamanashi erected a large black screen along a footpath to block the view of Mount Fuji to discourage photo-snapping crowds.

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