
According to authorities, an American woman who went missing while hiking on Table Mountain in South Africa has been found useless.
Brook Cheuvront was a 20-year-old undergraduate from North Carolina. She was in Cape Town for an internship with a non-governmental organization ( NGO ).
She was reported missing on Saturday after her friends were unable to contact her and the monitoring software she was using for a single hike stopped working. Eventually, the body of her was discovered on the mountaintop Devil’s Peak, a part of Table Mountain National Park, the following evening.
South African National Parks ( SANParks ) reported that Cheuvront had left her place of lodging around noon on Saturday to begin the hike. Nonetheless, concern grew when her recording software failed to release, which prompted her pals to contact the police.
Rangers and forest search-and-rescue team immediately launched a hunt, but work were called off late on Saturday. On Sunday, a plane resumed the research and discovered her body.
SANParks confirmed that a cause of Cheuvront’s suicide is being looked into, with an examination scheduled for later this year.
Prior to her horrible passing, she was a student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She was well-known in her home for her outstanding academic achievement, particularly as part of the prominent Morehead-Cain Scholarship system. She had the opportunity to study abroad thanks to this plan.
In a profound Instagram post, Cheuvront’s dad, Steve Cheuvront, expressed the mother’s disaster, writing,” God assist me and us”.
Despite some reservations, West African authorities have refuted any significant problems with violence in Table Mountain National Park. In an effort to maintain health, they have urged hikers to steer clear of solo travel.