Business Day

Sherpas break Everest records

- Agency Staff Kathmandu /AFP

Two Nepali Sherpas broke their own world records for the most Everest summits by a man and a woman on Wednesday, reaching the world’s highest mountain peak for a 22nd and ninth time, respective­ly.

Kami Rita Sherpa, a profession­al guide, and Lhakpa Sherpa, who works in a supermarke­t in Connecticu­t, reached the summit from opposite sides of the 8,848m mountain.

Kami Rita, 48, was one of six Sherpas who took seven clients to the summit from the Nepali side, said Mingma Sherpa of Seven Summit Treks, who organised the expedition.

A guide for more than two decades, he broke the previous record of 21 summits that he shared with two other Sherpas.

Kami Rita first reached the top of Everest in 1994 when working for a commercial expedition. “I did not start climbing to set a world record,” he said in April before setting out for the mountain. “It wasn’t for any competitio­n.”

Lhakpa Sherpa, 44, reached the peak for a ninth time via the northern route from Tibet, her brother Mingma Gelu Sherpa said. The US-based Lhakpa has repeatedly broken her own record for the most Everest summits by a woman.

The next most accomplish­ed female Everest climber is American Melissa Sue Arnot, who has reached the top six times.

The daughter of a yak herder, Lhakpa worked as a porter and kitchen hand on trekking and mountainee­ring expedition­s, before becoming a climber herself. She moved to the US 16 years ago and said she planned to continue climbing, while keeping her job.

“I keep going to encourage other Nepali women to climb,” she said.

The twin records come on the heels of Australian Steve Plain becoming the fastest person to summit the highest mountains on all seven continents. He completed the seven climbs in 177 days — nine days quicker than the previous record — after reaching the top of Everest on Monday.

Hundreds of climbers are on Everest attempting to reach the summit during the narrow window of good weather in May.

But the mountain is also highlighti­ng its risks.

A Sherpa guide has been missing on Everest’s southern side in Nepal since Monday, said Mingma.

On the Tibet side a team was forced to retreat from just below the summit when 11 of their bottled oxygen systems failed.

“Multiple teams using the same device have experience­d similar oxygen system failures. There are no reported injuries,” Alpenglow Expedition­s said in a statement.

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