The Borneo Post

Ex-Gurkha bids to reclaim ‘oldest on Everest’ title

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KATHMANDU: An 85-year-old former Gurkha is making a bid to reclaim his title as the world’s oldest person to summit Mount Everest.

A Guinness World Record certificat­e hangs proudly in Min Bahadur Sherchan’s Kathmandu home and by the end of this year’s spring climbing season he hopes to have a second one hanging next to it.

Sherchan made his historic climb in 2008 when he was 76, but he lost the record five years later when Japanese mountainee­r Yuichiro Miura summited the 8,848-metre peak at the age of 80.

Sherchan has since been on a quest to take back the title — though he says it is only to prove to himself that he can.

“My aim is not to break anybody’s record, this is not a personal competitio­n between individual­s. I wish to break my own record,” Sherchan told AFP in the Nepali capital.

Neverthele­ss, the octogenari­ans have been in a tug of war for the honour of being Everest’s oldest summiteer.

Both Sherchan and Miura summited in 2008, but the former soldier in the British Gurkha army secured the record by virtue of being a year older.

When Miura snatched the title in 2013 Sherchan was also preparing to tackle the peak in a bid to retain his title.

But delayed paperwork meant he missed the narrow window of good weather in May when most people attempt to summit.

In 2015, Sherchan was on his way to Everest when a devastatin­g quake hit Nepal, killing nearly 9,000 people including 18 in an avalanche that hit the mountain’s base camp, and he was forced to turn back.

“These hurdles haven’t discourage­d me, I am determined to go,” he said.

Ang Tsering Sherpa, the head of Nepal’s mountainee­ring associatio­n, has little doubt that Sherchan’s determinat­ion will carry him at least part of the way up Everest.

“He is very determined and has strong willpower,” said Sherpa who worked with Sherchan during his previous record attempts.

More than 450 people summited Everest last year, many using mountainee­ring permits that were extended by the government following the cancellati­on of the 2015 spring climbing season due to the earthquake. — AFP

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