Two dead, 12 missing in Everest avalanche

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Two Nepali porters were killed and 12 others feared missing in an avalanche on Mount Everest, authorities said Friday. "We have rescued two people and we are still looking for 12 others who are missing," said the Secretary of the Tourism Ministry's Mountain Section, Dipendra Poudel. "We have recovered two bodies already. All of those caught in the avalanche were Nepali porters." Helicopters and Sherpa climbers were deployed for rescue work after the avalanche hit a section of Everest between camps one and two early Friday.


Source : Sapa-dpa /lk
Date : 18 Apr 2014 07:47
 
SEARCH RESUMES FOR CLIMBING GUIDES MISSING IN EVEREST AVALANCHE

The search for four climbing guides missing on Mount Everest resumed on Saturday following the deaths of 12 others, authorities said. "The weather has been favourable so far," said Dipendra Poudel, secretary of the Mountain Section of Tourism Ministry. "But we have no hopes of finding anyone alive, and the death toll is likely to rise." Twelve Nepali climbing guides were killed in an avalanche on Mount Everest Friday. Seven bodies were airlifted off the mountain and handed over to their relatives in the Everest region on Friday and five others were to be handed over on Saturday. A team of 50, comprising security personnel, climbers, doctors and government officials, were helping with the search. Seven people survived the avalanche that hit as the climbers were ascending from the base camp to camp one. Before the climbing season beings in May, the guides go ahead to set up tents and lay up food and other equipment for climbers. The guides were employees from five different trekking companies. One of the survivors, Dawa Sherpa, told the local media that the avalanche had hit suddenly when they were queuing up to cross a difficult trail at Khumbu icefall. "There was no space for us to run or escape. So we huddled together, holding one another tight. But within a very short time, we were all buried." Concerns have been high recently over the number of tourists on the mountains, in particular after the government this year slashed mountaineering fees. In 1996, eight climbers were killed on Everest in a snowstorm. More than 4,000 people have summitted the mountain since the first ascent in 1953 and 400 have died trying.


Source : Sapa-dpa /lk
Date : 19 Apr 2014 07:29
 
Climbing Mount Everest, while admirable, is not a unique feat anymore.

People should back off this dangerous place and find some other outdoor pursuit.
 
13TH BODY PULLED FROM SNOW IN EVEREST AVALANCHE
By BINAJ GURUBACHARYA

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 testing the strength of newly fallen snow and using extra ropes, clamps and aluminum ladders to navigate the unstable field.

The avalanche barreled down a narrow climbing pass known as the "popcorn field" for its bulging chunks of ice at about 6:30 a.m. Friday. The group of about 25 Sherpa guides were the first people making their way up this climbing season to dig paths and fix ropes for their foreign clients to use in attempting to reach the summit next month.

One of the survivors told his relatives that the path had been unstable just before the snow slide hit at an elevation near 5,800 meters (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 Katmandu, Nepal's capital.

Four survivors were conscious and 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.

Hundreds of climbers, guides and support crews had been at Everest's base camp preparing to climb the 8,850-meter (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 sister-in-law, Dawa Yanju. Doctors said Tashi, who was partially buried in the snowfall, suffered several broken ribs.

The Sherpa people are one of the main ethnic groups in Nepal's alpine region, and many make their living as climbing guides on Everest and other Himalayan peaks.

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, including famed mountaineer Rob Hall, and was later memorialized in a book, "Into Thin Air," by Jon Krakauer. Six Nepalese guides were killed in an avalanche in 1970.

Earlier this year, Nepal announced several steps to better manage the heavy flow of climbers and speed up rescue operations. The steps included the dispatch of officials and security personnel to the base camp at (5,300 meters) 17,380 feet, where they will stay throughout the spring climbing season, which ends in May.


Source : Sapa-AP /ns
Date : 19 Apr 2014 11:33
 
Too many people up there in any case. I heard that this one path leading up to the base camp is so jam pack full of people at times, that people die there because they take too long waiting for people to pass.
 
Climbing Mount Everest, while admirable, is not a unique feat anymore.

People should back off this dangerous place and find some other outdoor pursuit.

Spend a weekend on a boat fishing, couple of beers and a few laughs and the thought of climbing Everest will never cross ones mind again. That's fun!
 
SHERPAS STRUGGLE AS EVEREST SHUTS DOWN AFTER KILLER AVALANCHE

An unprecedented shutdown of Mount Everest after the worst ever accident on the world's highest peak has left grieving Nepalese sherpa guides and their families fearing for their livelihoods.

The avalanche on April 18 that tore through a group of sherpas -- who were hauling gear up the mountain for their foreign clients before dawn -- left 16 people dead and three others seriously wounded.

The resulting labour dispute, with sherpas clamouring for better death and injury benefits from the Nepalese government which reaps huge revenues from the multi-million dollar climbing industry, saw scores of expeditions cancelled.

The effective closure of the mountain this season dealt a huge blow to international climbers who paid large sums for the chance to fullfil their dreams of scaling the 8,848-metre (29,029-foot) high peak.

But sherpas, who are often the sole breadwinners for their extended families, face a more desperate problem, with many left struggling to make ends meet in a country mired in poverty.

"All of us came here to climb and earn. To choose not to climb is a critical decision for us," Lam Babu Sherpa told AFP as his expedition prepared to leave Everest base camp. "A cancelled season will be hardest on us."

As the climbing business has grown in Nepal, sherpas, an ethnic group thought to be of Tibetan origin from the eastern Himalayas, have become indispensable as guides and porters for expeditions.

The most famous sherpa is Tenzing Norgay, who made the first summit of Everest with New Zealand mountaineer Edmund Hillary in 1953.

The term today is used for all local guides who assist Himalayan expeditions, earning between $3,000 to $6,000 during the two to three month season, a relatively good wage in a country where hundreds of thousands of others are forced overseas in search of work.

The community numbers 600, ranging from cooks on Everest to guides and elite ice doctors who fix the ropes and ladders before climbers tackle the peak.

For Tenzing Chottar Sherpa, 27, who was taking part in his first Everest expedition, it meant the chance to send his children to a private school, his wife Ang Dali Sherpa told AFP.

He had promised to come home as soon as the season ended, and Ang Dali, 28, decided to wait until then to tell him she was pregnant with their third child.

"He told me to take care of our kids, and be patient with our daughter, who is very naughty," she said of her last conversation with her husband, one of three sherpas whose bodies were not recovered from the avalanche.

With no savings, Ang Dali fears for her children.

"I wanted a better future for our kids, I never wanted them to become guides, but now who knows what will happen to them."

The disaster sparked a debate about compensation for the families of injured or killed sherpas, many of whom are forced to rely on the charity of Western climbers despite being key to the industry's success.

The government pledged $400 for the families of those killed to cover funeral expenses, an offer rejected by angry sherpas, whose families currently only receive $10,000 in life insurance.

Medical coverage is about $3,000, which does not even cover the cost of a single helicopter trip out of base camp for treatment.

The disaster underscored the huge risks borne by sherpas who carry food, fix ropes, repair ladders and more to enable climbers to reach the "roof of the world".

Namgyal Sherpa was just a few steps ahead of those killed when the massive block of overhanging ice broke free on a dangerous stretch of the mountain called the Khumbu Icefall.

Sherpa and others spent hours digging through snow, pulling out bodies, including that of his cousin, and rescuing injured colleagues.

"My first thought was we were all going to die," the 38-year-old guide, who has crossed the icefall numerous times during his 11 summits.

Days after the avalanche, Russell Brice, veteran mountaineer and owner of top expedition company Himex, told AFP, "anywhere else in the world, we wouldn't be climbing across an icefall like this one."

"We do it because it's Everest," Brice said.

At a funeral ceremony in Kathmandu for those killed, one woman, whose husband escaped uninjured from the avalanche, said the shutdown has left her anxious about the months ahead.

"The mountain is our livelihood, this is what we do," said Sarkini Sherpa, whose husband was preparing to leave base camp.

"We had hoped he would earn enough this season to pay for our kids' education in Kathmandu... but now I am very worried, I don't know how we will pay our bills," the 40-year-old told AFP.

But she was certain the sherpas would return to the mountain next year. "This is a terrible tragedy, but the men... will climb again," she said.

"There is no other option."


Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 28 Apr 2014 06:40
 
An oldish female colleague ... who last year did an 800km+ hiking pilgrims' journey through France and Spain (2/3 years after a hip replacement) is planning to do the hike to the base camp of Everest.

While she is a teacher (who is suppose to be piss-poor), she has more money than any teacher would know what to do with, from business properties she developed (and still has) while married to her ex-husband.

No surprise that she is our Economic and Management Sciences Subject Head.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
An oldish female colleague who last year did the 800km+ pilgrims' journey through France and Spain is planning to do the hike to the base camp of Everest.

While she is a teacher (who are suppose to be piss-poor) she has more money than good sense from business properties she developed and still has while married to her ex-husband.

No surprise that she is our Economic and Management Sciences Subject Head.

and your point is?
 
FAMILIES OF EVEREST AVALANCHE VICTIMS STILL AWAIT PAYOUTS

More than two months after the deadliest accident in Mount Everest's history, relatives of the victims said Thursday that they have yet to receive compensation and insurance payments promised by the government.

The government initially pledged $400 for the families of the 16 Nepalese guides killed in the April 18 avalanche, but later hiked the compensation to $5,000 after angry sherpas protested the sum was too small.

The families are also entitled to life insurance payments of $10,000.

"We haven't received a single rupee from the government," said Menuka Gurung, 25, the wife of avalanche victim Ash Bahadur Gurung.

Gurung, a housewife with two children, said she had been living on handouts from Western climbers since the accident.

Chhechi Sherpa, the 19-year-old daughter of victim Ang Kaji Sherpa, also said the government had not contacted her family about compensation.

"The country earns so much in royalties from mountaineering. It's disheartening that they don't care about the families of the people who sustain the industry," she said.

The avalanche victims, who all worked as guides on the world's highest peak, were their families' main bread-winners.

The tourism ministry blamed bureaucracy for the payment delays.

"We're committed to addressing the demands," a senior tourism ministry official, Madhusudan Burlakoti, told AFP.

"The file has been forwarded to the finance ministry and the funds will be released after the process is completed," he said.

Ramesh Prasad Dhamala, president of Nepal's Trekking Agencies Association, said the government should "honour its promises on time".

"We will intensify efforts for compensation if the delay continues," he added.

Nepal's government earned $3.6 million this year from Everest climbing fees after issuing permits to 734 people.

But the latest climbing season ended with only one successful summit after climbers abandoned their plans following the deadly avalanche.


Source : Sapa-AFP /gq
Date : 03 Jul 2014 12:28
 
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