Waikato Times

Climbers die on Everest: officials

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NEPAL/CHINA: Three Mt Everest climbers died and a fourth was missing as storms and high winds closed fleeting windows of good weather that opened a chance for teams to push toward the top of the world’s tallest peak, authoritie­s said yesterday.

Roland Yearwood, a doctor from Alabama who returned to Everest after surviving the earthquake-triggered avalanche in 2015, died not far from the summit on the Nepal side early Sunday, local time, according to Nepal tourism officials and his trekking company.

Slovak mountainee­r Vladimir Strba also died on Sunday, and search operations continued for an Indian climber who was separated from his guide Saturday. And on the Tibet side of the mountain, a 54-year-old Australian climber, Francesco Enrico Marchetti, died after suffering altitude sickness, according to a report in the Himalayan Times.

This year a record number of climbers are trying to scale the world’s highest peak, with 375 foreigners now permitted, the most since 1953. The high traffic volume has fuelled concerns there may be safety issues on the mountain that continues to suffer environmen­tal degradatio­n.

Mountainee­rs ascending to the top confirmed this season that little remains of the famed ‘‘Hillary Step’’ - the wall of rock that was once the final test of endurance before the summit and named for mountainee­r Edmund Hillary who was the first to reach the Everest summit in 1953 with fellow climber Tenzing Norgay.

An estimated 60 climbers made the summit in Nepal on Sunday alone, authoritie­s said.

‘‘The weather has been pretty bad, especially with high winds, but there were some little keyholes which climbers have been lucky to take advantage of,’’ said Tendi Sherpa, a longtime guide, said in a Facebook direct message from base camp.

Tendi Sherpa said that Sunday saw a busy day for helicopter evacuation­s, mostly altitudere­lated sicknesses, frostbite and snow blindness. He said several teams were planning on climbing all night and expect to reach the summit Monday morning.

Meanwhile, Chhewang Sherpa, managing director at Arun Treks, said that Indian climber Ravi Kumar made it to the summit at 1.28pm on Saturday afternoon, but grew tired on the descent and had to lie down. His Nepali guide was also feeling sick and decided to descend to call for rescue, leaving Kumar with a supply of supplement­al oxygen. The guide later stumbled into the high altitude Camp 4, but Kumar has not been found. - Washington Post

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