Gulf Today

Magar vows to work for the differentl­y-abled

- As

KATHMANDU: The first double above-the-knee amputee to climb Mount Everest returned from the mountain on Tuesday pledging to dedicate the rest of his life to helping people with disabiliti­es.

Hari Budha Magar, a former Gurkha soldier who lives in Britain, reached the peak of the world’s highest mountain last week.

“My main aim for the rest of my lifetime is going to be working to bring awareness about disability,” Magar said on his return to Kathmandu, Nepal’s capital.

As a soldier in a Gurkha regiment in the British army, Magar lost both his legs in Afghanista­n when he accidently stepped on an improvised explosive device in 2010.

Hundreds of supporters and officials, including Nepal’s tourism minister, greeted him at Kathmandu’s airport and offered him garlands.

He was taken from the airport in an open truck decorated with flowers and waved at people along the way.

“We all have our own weaknesses and disabiliti­es, but instead of the weaknesses we should be focusing on our strength, and only then we can all lead a beter and meaningful life,” he said.

He said the climb up the 8,849-metre mountain was not easy and he thought several times about quiting because of his family.

“I had made the promise that I will have to return for the sake of my son,” he said.

On the way to the summit he ran out of oxygen in the tank he was carrying.

“This was the first time I experience­d what it is to be deprived of oxygen. I had the tingling sensation, my hands and feet were cold and I was gasping for breath,” he said.

He was able to get more oxygen from his climbing partners, but then batled with bad weather as he approached the summit, which he reached late in the aternoon because of his slow pace. Most climbers try to reach the top in the morning because conditions become dangerous later in the day.

He said he saw rescuers pulling the bodies of two dead climbers along the way.

Ater his successful climb, “I hugged all the Sherpas and cried like a baby, I was so happy,” Magar said in a video released by his press office. “My lifetime goal is to change the perception­s people have of disability. My life changed in a blink of an eye. But whatever happens, you can still lead a fulfilling life.”

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Hari Budha Magar is welcomed upon arrival at the airport in Kathmandu on Tuesday.
Associated Press ↑ Hari Budha Magar is welcomed upon arrival at the airport in Kathmandu on Tuesday.

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