The Borneo Post

Indian police fire couple for faking Everest climb

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NEW DELHI: Two Indian police officers who falsely claimed to have reached the summit of Mount Everest last year have been sacked, authoritie­s said yesterday.

Nepal’s government last year imposed a 10-year mountainee­ring ban on Dinesh and Tarakeshwa­ri Rathod, a married couple, after finding they had doctored photos to support their claim.

Now the police force in the western Indian city of Pune where the couple worked has dismissed them after conducting its own investigat­ion.

“We dismissed them from service on Saturday after the completion of an internal department­al inquiry,” Pune’s additional commission­er of police Sahebrao Patil told AFP by telephone.

“We found that they had given false informatio­n to media, cheated the Indian and Nepali government­s and morphed photos to show that they had reached the top of Mount Everest – which, in fact, they had not.”

Nepal’s tourism department initially awarded the Rathods a certificat­e after they said they had reached the top of the world’s highest mountain on May 23, 2016.

They investigat­ed after fellow climbers cast doubt on the claim and said photos purporting to show the couple at the summit were doctored.

The incident prompted a review of the procedure for certifying ascents, which currently demands photos and reports from team leaders and government liaison officers stationed at the base camp.

There has been a steady rise in the number of climbers attempting to scale Everest in the last decade as the cost has fallen. — AFP

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