Dayton Daily News

Bodies of 9 climbers taken from mountain

- By Binaj Gurubachar­ya and Emily Schmall

Rescuers KATHMANDU, NEPAL — hampered by difficult, remote terrain took two days to recover the bodies of nine climbers, including one of the world’s best, who hoped to map a new route to a Himalayan peak in Nepal that hasn’t been scaled in eight years.

Local police chief Bir Bahadur Budamagar said a group of villagers reached the climbers’ devastated campsite on Saturday on Gurja Himal, a less-popular but pristine mountain in the shadow of Dhaulagiri, the world’s seventh-highest peak and a day’s walk from the nearest village.

The damage to the climbers’ bodies, including broken limbs and smashed skulls, indicated a violent wind carrying chunks of ice swept them away from their campsite, Budamagar said. The bodies were found spread in a 1-mile radius.

“The battered pieces and tents and other equipment were scattered even farther away,” Budamagar said.

The climbers included Kim Chang-ho, the first South Korean to summit all 14 Himalayan peaks over 26,250 feet without using supplement­al oxygen, who was leading the expedition with four other South Koreans and four Nepalese guides.

A sixth Korean climber had become ill and was in a village far below the base camp during the storm. When the members of the expedition team broke radio contact and went silent, the climber, who has not been identified, called Wangchu Sherpa’s Trekking Camp Nepal agency in Kathmandu, which equipped and organized the expedition. The agency, in turn, called Global Rescue, a Boston-based travel risk company insuring four of the Korean climbers, notifying them of suspected fatalities on the mountain, according to the firm’s chief executive, Dan Richards.

Though the climbers had planned to summit a new route on a challengin­g mountain, Wangchu Sherpa said he didn’t have any particular reason to be concerned. It wasn’t one of Nepal’s giant peaks, and since achieving his record summit in 2013, Kim had been concentrat­ing on climbing routes that hadn’t been tried before, Sherpa said.

He said that Kim, since achieving the feat in 2013, had been concentrat­ing on climbing routes that hadn’t been tried before.

Nepal offers hundreds of mountains to climb, and mountainee­rs generally choose those where the routes and conditions are well known.

Only 30 climbers have ever reached the peak of the 23,590-foot Gurja Himal, government tourism director Surendra Thapa said, and Kim was not among them.

Many climbers are discourage­d from the mountain at least in part because of a legal requiremen­t to have at least three trained Nepalese guides along to receive a permit, Thapa said.

“These people like to go to mountains which are not crowded and there are no commercial­ly organized expedition­s of big groups. On the bad side, they are also far from getting help when in trouble,” said Jiban Ghimire, who organizes expedition­s for the Kathmandu-based company Shangrila Nepal Trek.

The bodies of Kim and four other South Koreans who were killed will arrive in South Korea on Wednesday, according to an official from South Korea’s Corean Alpine Club.

Rescuers retrieved the climbers’ bodies on Sunday after the weather cleared. The body of one of the guides was taken to his village, while the eight others were flown to Kathmandu.

 ?? NIRANJAN SHRESTHA / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Family members of Nepalese guides cry as bodies of those killed on Gurja Himal mountain arrive at the Teaching hospital in Kathmandu, Nepal, on Sunday.
NIRANJAN SHRESTHA / ASSOCIATED PRESS Family members of Nepalese guides cry as bodies of those killed on Gurja Himal mountain arrive at the Teaching hospital in Kathmandu, Nepal, on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States