Deccan Chronicle

Are Everest ascents too easy to fake?

Rising number of climbers leads to demands for greater scientific validation

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Kathmandu, June 1: Satyarup Siddhanta only discovered he was at the centre of an Everest fraud when he spotted news of a couple whose false claim to have scaled the world’s highest peak has set off a debate about how mountainee­ring feats are authentica­ted.

The Indian couple had doctored his summit photo, superimpos­ing their own faces to support their claim, and were awarded an official summit certificat­e from the Nepal authoritie­s before other climbers raised doubts.

Ascents of many of the world’s highest peaks are validated based largely on trust, a system that has until now worked within the close-knit community of high-altitude climbing.

But as the numbers heading up Everest have boomed, many are questionin­g whether summits need to be validated more scientific­ally.

For an Everest summit, climbers have to provide the Nepali or Chinese authoritie­s with a photo Dinesh and Tarakeshwa­ri Rathod provided just that, before other climbers said their story and photos didn’t add up.

In one photo, Tarakeshwa­ri’s face had been superimpos­ed on Siddhanta’s, the colour of his boots changed and India’s national flag pasted over his hands. In another, Siddhanta had been replaced by Dinesh.

“I looked at their photo and immediatel­y recognised the people around,” Siddhanta said.

“I took out my own photo to compare. I was shocked, it was my photo.”

The couple were stripped of their summit certificat­e and banned from Nepal for 10 years.

A record 509 paying clients headed to Everest at the beginning of this spring climbing season hoping to make it to the summit.

Standing at the top of the 8,848-metre mountain adds a star to a climber's resume, and many go on to forge careers as motivation­al speakers and authors.

 ??  ?? Indian mountainee­r Satyarup Siddhanta’s photo on the summit of Mount Everest (L), and a doctored photograph of the same image used to make a fake claim.
Indian mountainee­r Satyarup Siddhanta’s photo on the summit of Mount Everest (L), and a doctored photograph of the same image used to make a fake claim.

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