Spring climbing season death toll reaches 16

KATHMANDU: At least two more climbers died above the high camp of Mt Everest in the last 24 hours, bringing death toll to 16 on different mountains above 8,000 m in the spring climbing season, the expedition organisers said.

A file photo of Wui Kin Chin. Courtesy: Facebook
A file photo of Wui Kin Chin. Courtesy: Facebook

Subash Shrestha, an official at Himalaya Vision Pvt Ltd informed that Ing Landgraf (Ernst) from Austria breathed his last at the Second Step on Mt Everest yesterday while he was returning from the summit point of the world’s highest mountain. The 65-year-old climber was a part of an expedition run by Kobler & Partner from the Tibetan side, according to the officials at the advanced base camp.

Babu Sherpa, Managing Director at Peak Promotion Pvt Ltd, said that Nihal Bagwan from Maharashtra, India breathed his last at Camp IV on Mt Everest on Nepal side after he was rescued by a group of Sherpa climbers from the balcony area. “The 27-year-old climber died at Camp IV after he fell ill near balcony area while returning from the summit of Mt Everest,” Sherpa said. Bagwan was the leader of a two-member expedition, he added.

With the latest fatalities on Mt Everest, the deaths take the toll on different mountains above 8,000 m to 16 in the spring climbing season, according to expedition officials. “At least eight Indian climbers among 16 persons were killed on different mountains,” the officials added.

Indian climber Kalpana Das, 49, who was a member of the ‘Three Women Expedition’ breathed her last near the balcony area while descending from the summit point on Mt Everest yesterday, Gyanendra Shrestha, a liaison officer at the Everest base camp said, adding that Anjali S Kulkarni, 54, from Mumbai, India breathed her last above Camp IV on Wednesday night. Ravi Thakar from India breathed his last at Camp IV while returning from the Everest summit last week.

Bulgarian climber Evan Yuriev Tomov, who scaled Mt Lhotse without using oxygen and Sherpa support, died while descending the mountain on May 17 while Malaysian climber Wui Kin Chin breathed his last in Singapore after he was exposed to sub-zero temperature for nearly two days in the death zone on Mt Annapurna in the last month. Phujung Bhote Sherpa of Makalu, Sankhuwasabha slipped into crevasse and plunged to his death near Camp II of Mt Cho Oyu, the world’s sixth highest mountain in Tibet, on April 29, officials added.

A file photo of Wui Kin Chin. Courtesy: Facebook
A file photo of Wui Kin Chin. Courtesy: Facebook