The Commercial Appeal

13th body pulled from avalanche snow

Three guides still missing; weather complicate­s search

- By Binaj Gurubachar­ya

Associated Press

KATMANDU, Nepal — Search teams recovered a 13th body Saturday from the snow and ice covering a dangerous climbing pass on Mount Everest, where an avalanche a day earlier swept over a group of Sherpa guides in the deadliest disaster on the world’s highest peak.

Another three guides remained missing, and searchers were working quickly to find them in case weather conditions deteriorat­ed, said Maddhu Sunan Burlakoti, head of the Nepalese government’s mountainee­ring department. But the painstakin­g effort involved test- ing the strength of newly fallen snow and using extra clamps, ropes and aluminum ladders to navigate the treacherou­s Khumbu icefall, a maze of immense ice chunks and crevasses.

The avalanche slammed into the guides at about 6:30 a.m. Friday near the “popcorn field,” a section of the Khumbu known for its bulging chunks of ice. The group of about 25 Sherpa guides were among the first people making their way up the mountain this climbing season. They were hauling gear to the higher camps that their foreign clients would use while attempting to reach the summit next month.

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One of the survivors told his relatives that the path had been unstable just before the snow slide hit at an elevation near 19,000 feet. The area is considered particular­ly dangerous due to its steep slope and deep crevasses that cut through the snow and ice covering the pass year round. As soon as the avalanche occurred, rescuers, guides and climbers rushed to help, and all other climbing was suspended.

Seven of the 12 bodies pulled out and brought down Friday were handed over to their families in the Everest region, while the other five were taken to

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Sources: 8000ers; Himalayan Database; Associated Press reports

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AP Daughter of Nepalese mountainee­r Ang Kaji Sherpa, killed in an avalanche on Mount Everest, cries as her father’s body is brought to the Sherpa Monastery in Katmandu, Nepal, on Saturday. Rescuers were searching through piles of snow and ice on the slopes of Mount Everest on Saturday for three Sherpa guides who remained missing. Katmandu, Nepal’s capital.

Four survivors were being treated in the intensive care units of several Katmandu hospitals for broken ribs, fractured limbs, punctured lungs and skin abrasions, according to Dr. C.R. Pandey from Grande Hospital. Others were treated for less serious injuries at the Everest base camp.

Jon Reiter from Kenwood, Calif., said he was climbing with an Australian partner when his Sherpa guide pushed him behind ice blocks and out of harm’s way as the avalanche struck.

“We were moving up to Camp 1 just after dawn when we heard that crack,” said Reiter, 49. “My first thought was to film it, and I reached for my camera. But the Sherpa yelled to get down. Things started happening in slow motion. Big blocks of snow and ice started coming down all around.”

He talked to the Santa Rosa Press Democrat by satellite phone from base camp in Nepal, where he wrote a blog entry to let family and friends know he was OK.

It’s not clear how close Reiter was to the avalanche when it killed the Sherpa guides. But in response to questions, Reiter wrote on his blog Saturday: “There were very few western climbers in the area and all of us had our climbing Sherpa by our sides and they all survived.”

Hundreds of climbers, guides and support crews had been at Everest’s base camp preparing to climb t he 29,035- foot peak when weather conditions are most favorable next month. As with each year, the Sherpa guides from each of the expedition teams had been working together to prepare the path by carving routes through the ice, fixing ropes on the slopes and setting up camps at higher altitudes.

One of the injured guides, Dawa Tashi, said the Sherpas were delayed on their way up the slope because the path was unsteady. With little warning, a wall of snow crashed down on the group and buried many of them, according to Tashi’s sisterin-law, Dawa Yanju. Doctors said Tashi, who was partially buried in the avalanche, suffered several broken ribs.

More than 4,000 climbers have summited Everest since 1953, when it was first conquered by New Zealander Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay. Hundreds have died trying.

The worst recorded disaster on Everest had been a fierce blizzard on May 11, 1996, that caused the deaths of eight climbers.

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NIRANJAN SHRESTHA/ASSOCIATED PRESS
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