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Avalanche Kills 12 Sherpas on Mount Everest Deadliest Day: Everest’s Risks Fall on Sherpas
(about 7 hours later)
NEW DELHI — At least 12 Sherpa guides were killed Friday morning on Mount Everest when an avalanche struck as they were fixing ropes for other climbers, a Nepalese Tourism Ministry official said, the worst disaster on the mountain in recorded history. NEW DELHI — The Sherpas always go first, edging up the deadly flank of Everest while international clients wait for days in the base camp below.
The Sherpas were at an elevation of 19,000 feet when the avalanche hit, according to Madhu Sudan Burlakoti, joint secretary for the Tourism Ministry. He said four other people were missing and six had been injured. Some of the dead had been fixing ropes for climbers. They set off in the dark, before the day’s warmth causes the ice to shift. They creep one by one across ladders propped over crevasses, burdened with food and supplies, all the while watching the great wall of a hanging glacier, hoping that this season will not be the year it falls.
Elizabeth Hawley, considered the world’s leading authority on Himalayan climbing, said in a telephone interview that the avalanche was the “worst single incident of fatalities ever in the history of climbing Everest.” On Friday, however, it did.
The Nepalese government mobilized four helicopters for a search-and-rescue operation, which was continuing Friday in heavy snowfall, Mr. Burlakoti said. Around 6:30 a.m., as the Sherpas were tethered to ropes, a chunk of ice broke off, sending an avalanche of ice and snow down into the ice fields on the mountain’s south side and engulfing about 30 men. The toll, at 12 dead, with four still missing, is the worst in a single day in the history of Everest, climbers and mountaineering experts said.
The climbers were on a slope that is known as the popcorn field because of ice formations that resemble popcorn, said Ang Tshering Sherpa, president of the Nepal Mountaineering Association. The disaster has focused attention on the Sherpas, members of an ethnic group known for their skill at high-altitude climbing, who put themselves at great risk for the foreign teams that pay them. Among their most dangerous tasks is fixing ropes, carrying supplies and establishing camps for the clients waiting below, exposing themselves to the mountains first.
Many climbers who scale Mount Everest from the Nepalese side do so with the assistance of Sherpa guides, who have the laborious task of fixing ropes for other climbers, most of whom are foreigners. Because the guides expose themselves to the mountains first, they bear more risk. A Sherpa typically earns around $125 per climb per legal load, which the Nepalese government has set at around 20 pounds, though young men will double that to earn more, guides say. Raised on stories of wealth earned on expeditions, they also have very little choice, coming from remote places where there is little opportunity other than high-altitude potato farming.
More than 200 people have died while climbing Mount Everest since Edmund Hillary, a New Zealand-born mountaineer, and Tenzing Norgay, his Sherpa guide, were the first to reach its peak in 1953. In 1996, eight climbers died in a fierce blizzard, which was then the worst death toll in a single day on Everest, later memorialized in a book by Jon Krakauer. Friday’s avalanche, which killed no foreigners, left many thinking about this calculation.
Thousands have reached the summit of Everest, and the tourism industry in Nepal gets a huge boost from the climbing season in April and May. “All the hard work is done by Sherpas, that is the reality,” said Pasang Sherpa of the Nepal National Mountain Guide Association. “The client will say, ‘I did the summit three times, four times.’ That is our guest, and we have to accept it. Our job is to make a good scale for the clients, to make this comfortable. We have to do that.”
This year, the Nepalese government announced that officials and security personnel had been sent to the base camp at an altitude of 17,400 feet in an effort to speed up rescue operations for climbers, according to The Associated Press. “Normally our culture is like, we say, ‘The client is our god,’ ” he added.
The Sherpas were spread out at an elevation of about 19,000 feet when the avalanche hit, crossing a notorious area known by some locals as the Golden Gate because of the shape of its ice formations, Pasang Sherpa said. Climbers try to pass it as quickly as possible, but they have no choice but to edge across ladders one by one, stretching the crossing to 20 or 30 minutes, he said. Typically, he added, the teams try to cross before sunrise, when rising temperatures may cause shifts in the ice.
“This morning, our friends started a little late,” Pasang Sherpa said. “They arrived at quarter to seven.”
Tim Rippel, who is leading a group of mountaineers on the mountain with his company Peak Freaks, wrote on his company’s website that the Sherpas had been moving slowly, hauling “the mountainous loads of equipment, tents, stoves, oxygen and so on up to stock camps.” He was on the phone from base camp just before 7 a.m. local time when an ice chunk began to fall, causing the avalanche, said his wife, Becky Rippel.
The mountaineers were following a popular southern route up Everest from the Nepalese side, but this route means they have to pass underneath the western shoulder and its moving glacier. Mr. Rippel had been watching the glacier, which is a well-known problem, in recent days but did not think it looked as dangerous as it had in the past, Ms. Rippel said.
In the post on his website, Mr. Rippel described watching search and rescue efforts.
“I sat and counted 13 helicopter lifts, and 12 were dead bodies flying overhead, suspended by long-line from a helicopter,” he wrote. “Everyone is shaken here at base camp. Some climbers are packing up and calling it quits, they want nothing to do with this.”
Between 350 to 450 Sherpas are hired above the base camp during the two-month season, said Richard Salisbury, who works on the Himalayan Database, a record of Everest climbs. Apoorva Prasad, the founder of The Outdoor Journal, an Indian lifestyle and adventure magazine, described it as “very dirty work,” laborious and dangerous.
“These are the guys going up the mountain every season in the least safe way possible,” he said.
Foreigners are increasingly bringing their own guides, and, in an attempt to secure their livelihoods, Nepal this year proposed requiring outsiders to hire a local guide for any ascent above 26,000 feet. One such team hit a tense point last April, when three European climbers fought with a group of local guides between two camps. Some Sherpas said the foreign climbers had ascended ahead of their guides while they were fixing lines, violating the custom in Everest climbing.
Nima Nuru Sherpa, the first vice president of Nepal Mountaineering Association, said there was little question that Sherpas take more risks on Everest, mainly because they go ahead to fix lines and set up camp for paying clients.
“Today the incident happened, so we are just feeling sorry about ourselves,” he said. “The day-to-day life is very tense. We never know what will happen. So we are not at peace. It’s a scary profession, a scary job.”
The Himalayan Times identified the dead as Mingma Nuru Sherpa, Dorji Sherpa, Ang Tshiri Sherpa, Nima Sherpa, Phurba Ongyal Sherpa, Lakpa Tenjing Sherpa, Chhiring Ongchu Sherpa, Dorjee Khatri, Then Dorjee Sherpa, Phur Temba Sherpa, Pasang Karma Sherpa and Asman Tamang. The missing were identified as Tenzing Chottar Sherpa, Ankaji Sherpa, Pem Tenji Sherpa and Ash Bahadur Gurung.
Nima Nuru Sherpa said the men’s families would consult lamas, or holy men, to determine the most auspicious time to burn their bodies. He said he knew all the men reported dead, but was closest to Ankaji Sherpa, who was a member of his association and a friend.
“It’s too terrible for us, it’s very sad for us, it’s sad,” he said. “I say God will take him to the right heaven.”