This Article is From May 23, 2016

Indian Climber Dies On Everest, Two Others Missing

Indian Climber Dies On Everest, Two Others Missing

Indian mountaineer Subhash Pal has died on his way down from Mount Everest. His team and he were missing since Saturday. (File Photo)

Highlights

  • Mountaineer Subhash Pal died due to exhaustion while descending down
  • Deaths raise questions about safety standards, preps by operators
  • Climbing was halted after earthquake, avalanche killed over 30 in 2 years
Kathmandu:

An Indian mountaineer has died on Mount Everest and two of his teammates are missing, expedition organisers said Monday, as the death toll from the Himalayan climbing season rose to five.

Subhash Pal reached the 8,848-metre (29,029-foot) summit on Saturday but collapsed while descending the Hillary Step ice wall and died the following day.

He was the third to die on Everest in recent days, after an Australian and a Dutch climber succumbed to altitude sickness. Another two climbers have died on other peaks.

"He died while the guides were bringing him down," said Loben Sherpa of Trekking Camp Nepal, which organised the Indian team's expedition to Mount Everest.

Expedition officials made contact with Pal and teammate Sunita Hazra on Sunday and helped them descend to Camp 3, but the whereabouts of the remaining two climbers are still unknown.

"Sunita has been rescued and brought to a hospital in Kathmandu for treatment. We still don't have any update on the missing two," said Sherpa.

Another Indian climber died after falling ill while descending from Mount Dhaulagiri in the Himalayas.
As climbers ascend above 8,000 metres, they enter the "death zone" -- notorious for its difficult terrain and thin air -- where oxygen supplies fall to dangerously low levels and make mountaineers susceptible to altitude sickness.

"There are mixed feelings with the recent deaths, frostbite and rescues as it brings into focus the danger of climbing Everest," said veteran mountaineer and blogger Alan Arnette.

"However there is a sense of relief that in many ways, it was a 'normal' season."

A tourism official said more than 30 climbers had been rescued this season after suffering altitude sickness or frostbite.

More than 350 climbers including 140 foreigners have successfully scaled Everest this season after two consecutive years of deadly disasters that led to almost all attempts being abandoned.

Despite the risks and recent disasters, Everest's allure remains undimmed, with Nepal issuing 289 permits to foreigners for this year's spring climbing season.

Hundreds of climbers fled Everest last year after an earthquake-triggered avalanche at base camp killed 18 people.



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