Two Swiss mountaineers landed a small plane less than 400 metres from the summit of Mont Blanc on Tuesday before heading for the top of Europe's tallest peak with police in pursuit, the French gendarme said.
Hikers on the Mont Blanc massif. File photo: AFP
The pair landed the aircraft at 4,450 metres on the famous mountain in the French Alps in an incident described as a "provocation" by the mayor of the nearby Chamonix resort, Eric Fournier.
"It constitutes an intolerable attack on the high mountain environment and on all existing protective measures," Fournier said, describing the behaviour as "unprecedented".
Police saw the plane on the east face of Mont Blanc, Lieutenant Colonel Stephane Bozon, who heads the gendarmerie's mountain rescue service in Chamonix, told AFP.
The area, officials said, is not an authorised landing zone.
Police intercepted the two Swiss mountaineers to get their identity and asked them to turn back.
The pair were allowed to take off.
Bozon said they were reflecting on what offence had been committed.
Mont Blanc is crawling with thousands of climbers during the summer months, aiming to reach the 4,809 metre summit.
Officials have been grappling with a surge in adventure-seeking tourists – some without sufficient equipment or experience – hoping to scale the mountain during the summer season.
The increase in numbers has led to some people camping illegally and concerns over sanitary risks such as water availability and problems with waste disposal.
This article first appeared on http://www.thelocal.fr . The original can be read here .