Bangkok Post

Sherpas risk rare ascent of Everest

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KATHMANDU: Four veteran Sherpa climbers left yesterday for Mount Everest on a mission to climb the world’s highest mountain in five days from the Nepali side, aiming to set a record for its shortest winter ascent in nearly three decades, hiking officials said.

If successful, the team led by 34-yearold Tashi Lakpa Sherpa, who has climbed Everest eight times, will be the first to climb the 8,850-metre peak in 27 years during winter, when freezing cold and shorter daylight hours make climbing difficult.

“We know it is extremely risky and difficult to climb Sagarmatha during the winter, but we are very well acclimatis­ed and prepared for this,” Mr Sherpa told reporters, using the name by which Nepalis refer to Mount Everest.

“Ours is a strong team and we have confidence that we can do it,” he added, before flying in a helicopter to base camp at Everest.

Temperatur­es in the death zone of Everest, so-called because of thin air above its South Col, can drop as low as to -40C in winter, making climbing more challengin­g and risky than the popular spring season, say hiking officials.

The last winter ascent of the mountain dates to 1993, and many winter expedition­s since have failed to reach the top, said Mira Acharya, an official of Nepal’s tourism department.

Climbers usually spend several weeks on Everest acclimatis­ing and preparing for summit bids, but compressin­g that into five days is very challengin­g and risky, said Shanta Bir Lama, the chief of the Nepal Mountainee­ring Associatio­n.

Last year was Everest’s deadliest since 2015, with 11 climbers, most of them Indian, dying, nine on the Nepali side and two on the Tibetan side of the peak.

Since Everest was first conquered by New Zealand beekeeper Sir Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay in 1953, about 5,000 people have reached the top, but more than 300 people have died on its slopes.

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