The Witness

NEPALI, BRITISH CLIMBERS EXTEND EVEREST RECORDS

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Mount Everest saw a record-breaking day yesterday as Nepali climber Kami Rita Sherpa and Briton Kenton Cool reached the top of the world’s highest mountain, extending their records for the most summits by a Nepali and a foreigner.

Sherpa (54) reached the peak for the 29th time and Cool (50) made his 18th summit.

“Kami Rita and Kenton Cool both reached the summit today, making records,” Rakesh Gurung of Nepal’s tourism department told AFP.

A guide for more than two decades, Sherpa, also known as “Everest Man”, first summited the 8 849-metre peak in 1994 when working for a commercial expedition.

He has since climbed Everest almost every year, guiding clients. It was not immediatel­y clear whether he had a client with him on Sunday.

“Back again for the 29th summit to the top of the world ... One man’s job, another man/woman’s dream,” Sherpa posted on his Instagram account from base camp last week.

Sherpa climbed Everest twice last year to reclaim his record after another guide, Pasang Dawa Sherpa, equalled his number of ascents.

Kami Rita Sherpa has previously said that he has been “just working” and did not plan on setting records.

He has also conquered other challengin­g 8 000-metre peaks including the world’s second-highest mountain, K2 in Pakistan.

Cool, also a guide, was once told he would not walk unaided again after a rock-climbing accident in 1996 that broke both his heel bones, but his mountainee­ring career has confounded prediction­s.

Nepal has issued 414 Everest permits to mountainee­rs for this year’s spring climbing season, which runs from April to early June.

A climbing boom has made mountainee­ring a lucrative business since Edmund Hillary and sherpa Tenzing Norgay made the first ascent in 1953.

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