Gulf News

‘I did say the 22nd looked dangerous’

Everest operators have been warning for years that inexperien­ce will exact a heavy toll

- BY CHIRANJIB SENGUPTA Assistant Editor

Mount Everest remains the pinnacle of every climber’s dream and immediatel­y conjures a collage of magnificen­t memories — but becoming a part of a fatal traffic jam is certainly not among them.

A surge of trekkers waiting to get down from the summit on May 22 was blamed for the spike in deaths.

“I have seen so many climbing seasons, but never something as drastic as this,” Dawa Steven Sherpa, a Nepalese Sherpa entreprene­ur who has

scaled Mount Everest twice, told Gulf News yesterday.

“However, I don’t think such a high number of fatalities will stop people from attempting to climb in the next season,” said Dawa Steven over the phone from Kathmandu — where he has just returned back from the mountain.

Veteran operators of Everest have been warning for years that inexperien­ce among both climbers and rapidly proliferat­ing operators could lead to completely avoidable fatalities.

“With the number of operators growing by the day, we will end up with more fatalities on the mountain until the operators mature,” Russell Brice, owner of Himalayan Expedition, told Gulf News in an earlier interview.

Brice, one of the best-known faces of Himalayan experience­s, has been taking people up Everest since 1994 and his company is the biggest Everest operator in Nepal.

“Such a disaster was bound to happen, since 381 permits have been issued this season and more than 800 people are attempting to climb Mount Everest in a few windows this season from the Nepalese side. That’s a fatal recipe for disaster,” said Percy Fernandez, an avid mountainee­r based in Dubai, who was the expedition photograph­er of the 2013 NCC Everest expedition.

The final leg of the journey to the summit of Everest is a tricky and treacherou­s affair, and experts say the unpreceden­ted rush has been triggered by a combinatio­n of good weather and a mushroomin­g number of operators — not all of whom are scrupulous about safety.

The result: a long file of trekkers waiting in queue on the descent, with queues stretching beyond several hours.

On how the unpreceden­ted number of fatalities can be stopped, Dawa Steven said: “Several solutions are easily available. We work really hard along with other top members of the climbing community in Nepal to gather the data and schedules every season and try to spread out the number of climbers every day. This strategy worked very well in the past, but this year because the weather forecast went out of whack, everyone panicked to get a good window on the same day. I did say that the 22nd looked

very very dangerous to climb, but nobody listened.”

According to Fernandez, most of the climbers have died because of exhaustion. “On their way down, they ran out of oxygen because of the traffic jam.”

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 ?? AP ?? Apa Sherpa (centre) in Kathmandu, Nepal. Apa, who has stood on top of the world more times than all but one other person, is helping funding village schools to show Sherpa children that they have options in life other than working as guides on Mount Everest.
AP Apa Sherpa (centre) in Kathmandu, Nepal. Apa, who has stood on top of the world more times than all but one other person, is helping funding village schools to show Sherpa children that they have options in life other than working as guides on Mount Everest.
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 ??  ?? Dawa Steven Sherpa
Dawa Steven Sherpa
 ??  ?? Percy Fernandez
Percy Fernandez

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