According to Messner, 52 years after the death of Reinhold Messner's brother Günther at the 8125 meter high Nanga Parbat in the Himalayas, the second shoe of the dead man was discovered at the foot of the Diamir Glacier.

“Locals found the second shoe.

I was only sent a picture," Messner told the German Press Agency on Thursday.

Messner had previously posted the picture on Instagram.

According to Messner, the mountain shoe should belong to Günther's corpse.

He will pick up the shoe himself and bring it home, but there is no hurry, said the 77-year-old former extreme mountaineer.

“I will definitely go there again in the next few years.” He also wants to visit the schools he founded in the region.

He had already visited the place to commemorate his brother with the family.

"It's never over, it's always a sad, tragic story."

According to Messner, a bone was found at an altitude of 4,300 meters in 2004.

In 2005, Messner reported on finding Günther's first shoe on the same glacier.

The shoe – specially made for the expedition at the time – is now in one of Messner’s museums at Sigmundskron Castle near Bozen, in a kind of chapel that is stocked with photos of mountaineers who have had an accident.

Around the circumstances of Günther Messner's death, a violent dispute broke out between Messner and ex-comrades, which was also carried out in court almost 20 years ago.

It was about the allegation of insufficient help and the question of where and how Messner's brother actually died.

Messner had always emphasized that after reaching the summit, he had descended with his brother on the other side of the mountain out of necessity.

The places where bones and the first shoe were discovered prove that. The discovery of the second shoe is now just "confirmation of confirmation."