Kuwait Times

Nepali climber claims new record for 14 highest peaks

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ANepali mountainee­r yesterday smashed the speed record for summiting the world’s 14 highest peaks, racing up all “8000ers” in just six months and six days, organizers said. The previous record for the 14 mountains above 8,000 meters — completed by Nirmal Purja at 8.59 am yesterday-was almost eight years. “MISSION ACHIEVED! says @nimsdai from the summit of #Shishapang­ma,” read a post on Purja’s Facebook page, while a statement quoted the former British elite soldier as being “overwhelme­d and incredibly proud” after his 189day feat.

“It has been a grueling but humbling six months, and I hope to have proven that anything is possible with some determinat­ion, self-belief and positivity,” the 36-year-old said. “We started with nothing, but look how far we’ve come.” Starting with Italy’s legendary Reinhold Messner in 1986 — who on Tuesday praised Purja’s “unique mountainee­ring accomplish­ment”-around 40 climbers have climbed the Earth’s 14 highest mountains, but none have come close to Purja’s speed.

The late Polish climber Jerzy Kukuczka took seven years, 11 months and 14 days in 1987. South Korean Kim Chang-ho completed the challenge one month faster-although unlike Kukuczka and also Purja, he never used supplement­ary oxygen.

Project possible

Purja, a former member of the Gurkhas-a brigade of Nepalis in British army famous for their fearlessne­ss-as well as the elite Special

Boat Service, kicked off “Project Possible” in April. In the first part of his record attempt, Purja ticked off Annapurna, Dhaulagiri, Kanchenjun­ga, Everest, Lhotse and Makalu in just one month. He was not alone on Everest, reaching the summit on May 22 with 320 others and snapping a photo of a traffic jam of climbers on the world’s highest mountain that went viral.

This season a record 885 people climbed the famous mountain. A total of 11 people died, with at least four of those deaths blamed on overcrowdi­ng. A month later, Purja headed to Pakistan for the second part, where he first tackled the notorious Nanga Parbat at 8,125 meters. Battling sleep deprivatio­n to meet his target, Purja said he was almost sprinting up and down five of Pakistan’s highest peaks including Gasherbrum I, Gasherbrum II and K2, the second highest in the world.

Twenty-three days later he was standing atop Broad Peak, his fifth and final mountain of the second phase. Purja began his final push in September, reaching the tops of Cho Oyu and Manaslu within a week. Tuesday’s summit of Shishapang­ma was the final hurdle. When he first told others about his new quest, “everyone was laughing at me,” Purja told AFP in a recent interview in Kathmandu as he awaited permission from the Chinese government to tackle Shishapang­ma.

He said then he wanted his feats to inspire the next generation of Nepali climbers to break his records. Sherpas-Nepalis who often work as guides for foreign mountainee­rs-are the backbone of the lucrative climbing industry, but don’t attract anywhere near the same amount of attention or accolades as their internatio­nal companions.

“Internatio­nal attention and sponsors rush easily towards foreign climbers but Nepalis don’t get such opportunit­ies,” he said. Purja’s record was yet to be verified independen­tly, although he has individual summit certificat­es from Nepal and Pakistan and will apply to Guinness World Records for recognitio­n, his expedition organizers said. He also said he broke seven other records, including the fastest summit of the world’s three highest mountains and climbing Everest, Lhotse and Makalu in 48 hours.—AFP

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 ?? — AFP photos ?? These handout photos taken and released by Nepali climber Nirmal ‘Nims’ Purja and his ‘Bremont Project Possible’ team shows Purja standing at the summit of Nanga Parbat.
— AFP photos These handout photos taken and released by Nepali climber Nirmal ‘Nims’ Purja and his ‘Bremont Project Possible’ team shows Purja standing at the summit of Nanga Parbat.
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