The Phnom Penh Post

Everest record seeker died of altitude sickness

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AN 85-YEAR-OLD former Gurkha who was attempting to reclaim his title as the world’s oldest person to summit Mount Everest died of altitude sickness, the expedition organiser said yesterday.

Min Bahadur Sherchan died at Everest base camp on Saturday and his body was airlifted to Kathmandu.

“Doctors said that he died of natural causes. There was water build-up in his lungs because of altitude sickness,” Shiv Raj Thapa of Summit Nepal Trekking said after an autopsy.

Sherchan was resting at the base camp and waiting for the weather window to summit in a single attempt, skipping the usual multiple acclimatis­ation rotations because of his age.

He was on a bid to reclaim a title that he lost to Japanese mountainee­r Yuichiro Miura in 2013.

The former soldier became the oldest person to summit Everest in 2008 when he was 76, but he lost the record five years later when Miura reached the 8,848-metre peak at the age of 80.

The slightly hard of hearing grandfathe­r said earlier this year that he just wanted to prove to himself that he could still make it to the top of the world.

“My aim is not to break anybody’s record, this is not a per- sonal competitio­n between individual­s. I wish to break my own record,” Sherchan had said in February.

Sherchan’s death is the second fatality of the spring climbing season on Everest, which runs from late April to the end of May.

Experience­d Swiss climber Ueli Steck died last month when he fell from a steep ridge during an acclimatis­ation exercise.

Nearly 750 people will this year attempt to summit the world’s highest mountain during the narrow window of good weather that usually falls in mid-May.

This year is particular­ly crowded as it is the last chance for climbers who were forced off the mountain by the devastatin­g 2015 earthquake to use their permits. This has raised concerns about dangerous jams on the mountain.

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