Eastern Eye (UK)

Mountainee­r scales Everest to prove a point after ‘painful ban’

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AN INDIAN climber banned from Everest after faking a summit of the world’s highest mountain has successful­ly scaled the peak for real, saying he returned to “prove” himself.

Narender Singh Yadav claimed to have reached the top of the 8,849-metre (29,032-foot) mountain in May 2016. But photos of the 26-year-old at the summit were later shown to have been digitally altered, prompting the Nepal government to revoke recognitio­n of his feat.

Yadav and two other climbers were issued a six-year ban backdated to 2016, and this was the first year he was able to return to the mountain.

“Everest is a dream for all of us but Everest is life for me,” Yadav said last Friday (3). “There were a lot of allegation­s on me... that’s why I (had to) prove myself and climb Everest.”

Yadav maintains he reached the summit but that the expedition leader doctored his photos and posted them on social media after he was nominated for India’s prestigiou­s Tenzing Norgay Adventure Award in 2020.

The award was subsequent­ly withheld, an experience Yadav said was “very painful for me and my family”.

His ban ended on May 20. Seven days later, he was on the summit – this time with an ample photos and videos to prove his feat. “We granted him a certificat­e on Wednesday after he presented enough evidence of his Everest summit,” said Nepal tourism department official Bishma Raj Bhattrai.

Pemba Rita Sherpa, a guide with expedition organiser Pioneer Adventure, said two guides accompanie­d him instead of the usual one to make sure there were no disputes.

“We took many photos and videos of him,” he said. “We have to speak what is real. It is about our Sherpas’ reputation and the company’s reputation.”

A successful Everest summit is the crowning achievemen­t of any climber’s career, and many go on to forge careers as motivation­al speakers and authors.

The current system of authentica­tion requires photos along with reports from team leaders and government liaison officers stationed at the base camp – but it has been open to fraud attempts. An Indian couple were banned for 10 years in 2016 after they published doctored photos purporting to show them at the top of Everest.

The pair – both police constables – superimpos­ed themselves and their banners onto photos taken by another Indian climber at the summit. This year, a rare window of good weather has allowed more than 500 climbers and guides to reach the Everest summit since a team of Nepali climbers opened the route on May 7. The Himalayan nation reopened its peaks to mountainee­rs last year after the coronaviru­s shut down in 2020.

 ?? ?? INDOMITABL­E SPIRIT: Narendra ingh adav with his ertificate
thmandu last Friday (3
INDOMITABL­E SPIRIT: Narendra ingh adav with his ertificate thmandu last Friday (3

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