International News

Foreign climber dies after Mount Everest summit

KATHMANDU, (APP/AFP) – A foreign climber has died while
returning from the summit of Mount Everest, expedition organisers said Saturday, the latest death to mar the ongoing climbing season in the Himalayas.
The mountaineer, who has yet to be identified, died at Camp 4 after
falling ill with altitude sickness late Friday as he descended the world’s highest mountain.
“A team member informed us about the death but details of the dead
are yet to come,” said Mingma Sherpa, Managing Director of Seven Summit Treks.
Unconfirmed reports said the climber was a Dutch national.
“We are now working on bringing the body from Camp 4 to base camp
first and then to Kathmandu,” Sudarshan Prasad Dhakal, Director General of Nepal’s tourism department, said.
Around 330 climbers have successfully scaled Mount Everest this
season after two consecutive years of deadly disasters, but two
mountaineers have died in the past few days.
A Nepali sherpa guide perished Thursday after he slipped and fell
2,000 metres (6,562 feet) down Mount Lhotse, the world’s fourth-highest peak.
On the same day an Indian climber died after falling ill while
descending from Mount Dhaulagiri, also in the Himalayas.
Nepal issued 289 permits to foreign mountaineers for this year’s
brief spring climbing season, which runs from mid-April to the end of May, after two consecutive failed seasons.
Hundreds of climbers fled Everest last year after an
earthquake-triggered avalanche at base camp killed 18 people.
Only one climber summited the mountain in 2014 after an avalanche
killed 16 Nepali guides that year.
Since the first summit of Everest in 1953, more than 300 people, most
of them locals, have died while attempting to scale Everest and Lhotse, which share the same route until Camp 3 at 7,200 metres.
Mountaineering is a major revenue-earner for the impoverished
Himalayan nation but last year’s earthquake, which killed almost 9,000 people, threatened the future of the country’s climbing and trekking industry.