Oman Daily Observer

Police fire couple for faking Everest climb

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

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 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 said 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.

Nearly 450 mountainee­rs reached the summit of the 8,848-metre peak from the Nepal side during the brief spring climbing season this year, according to official figures.

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