Climbers begin Everest season


Getting ready: Guides and mountaineers standing outside their tents before attempting the Everest ascent at the base camp in Nepal. — AP

A team of Nepali climbers has reached the summit of Mount Everest, opening the route for hundreds of mountaineers expected to attempt the world’s highest peak in the coming weeks.

At least 12 members of a rope- fixing team made the ascent, marking the traditional start of the spring climbing window, expe­dition organisers said.

“The rope-fixing team reached the summit this morning,” said Chhang Dawa Sherpa of Seven Summits Treks.

“Climbers are already moving ahead,” he added.

A second team, coordinated by Mingma G. Sherpa of Imagine Nepal, assisted in preparing the route.

“Climbers are waiting to summit, so it was important to open the route on time,” he said.

The work had been briefly disrupted by a serac – a block of glacial ice – above the already treacherous Khumbu icefall, raising fears of delays early in the season.

However, teams established an alternative route to the 8,849m peak.

Nepal has issued a record 492 Everest permits this season, with a city of tents set up at the foot of Everest for climbers and others.

As most mountaineers attempt the ascent with the help of at least one Nepali guide, about a thousand climbers will be heading for the summit in the next few days.

The high numbers have rekindled concerns about overcrow­ding on the mountain, especially if poor weather shortens the climbing window.

In 2019, congestion near the summit forced climbers to queue for hours in freezing conditions, with several deaths later blamed on overcrowding.

Three Nepali climbers involved in Everest preparations have died so far this season, while two ­foreign climbers died on other Himalayan peaks. — AFP

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