Nepal seeks to ban 2 climbers it says faked Everest summit

Nepal, one of Asia's poorest nations and the site of most Everest climbs, has been struggling to root out bogus summiteers. PHOTO: REUTERS

KATHMANDU (NYTIMES) - The pictures seemed to show them at the top of the world, the summit of Mount Everest, and tourism officials in Nepal presented the two climbers with coveted certificates stating they had reached the world's highest peak.

But veteran mountaineers said they saw a lie in the photographic details: An oxygen mask with no tube connecting it to an oxygen tank, no reflections of snow or mountains in a man's sunglasses and limp flags in a place known for lacerating winds. The pictures were faked, they said, and so was the climb.

Now, authorities in Nepal are seeking to ban the two Indian mountaineers who submitted the photographs from climbing Mount Everest and other Nepalese peaks for 10 years, after a government investigation concluded that they had doctored the images showing they had made it to the summit when in fact they had not.

The climbers, Narender Singh Yadav and Seema Rani Goswami, claimed they had reached the top of the mountain in 2016, though at the time local Sherpas and others questioned that.

Still, tourism officials in Nepal presented them with the Everest certificates after the two climbers submitted photographs the Nepalese government now says were faked.

Yadav and Goswami, who were not especially well known before this controversy, come from a northern Indian state, Haryana, that has rewarded successful climbers in the past.

"Their claims for Everest summit couldn't be established," said Pradip Kumar Koirala, a Nepalese tourism official, on Monday (Feb 1).

Koirala, who led the investigation of the duo, which began in August, added, "We have recommended action against them."

Yadav said in an interview that he has all the proof required to show he reached the top of the mountain. He has filed a police complaint against his guide in Nepal, who he said was misleading people by denying that he had scaled the peak.

Goswami did not respond to questions posed by The New York Times.

Nepal, one of Asia's poorest nations and the site of most Everest climbs, has been struggling to root out bogus summiteers. But, in the past few years, the number of people faking Everest claims has sharply increased, from a few a decade ago to dozens every year.

Investigations have been rare in Nepal, a country hungry for every climbing dollar it can get. It has issued more and more Everest permits in recent years, sometimes leading to climbers pushing and shoving each other and creating a dangerous human traffic jam on the roof of the world.

For climbing the world's highest mountain, people in India are often given national awards. If they are already working for the government, they are sometimes given promotions and lifelong benefits.

Expedition organisers say the flow of climbers from India has increased in recent years as the perks have become better known.

But it was the prospect of that kind of recognition that undid the claim of Yadav and Goswami.

In August, Yadav was selected as one of the recipients of the prestigious Indian mountaineering award. But Indian mountaineers and Sherpas who said they had seen Yadav descending to Everest Base Camp without reaching the summit started posting comments online questioning the government's intention.

The Indian government decided to withhold the award pending an investigation. India's sports ministry, which confers the award, said it was looking into claims that Yadav had doctored photos and sought clarification from Nepalese tourism officials.

The Nepalese government was forced to open an investigation. Veteran climbers and many mountaineers questioned Yadav's climbing credentials and challenged details in his pictures.

The investigating committee interrogated Yadav's team leader, Naba Kumar Phukon. In an interview, Phukon said he told the panel that Yadav and Goswami never summited Everest.

"I don't know how he got certificate without any photos of the summit," Phukon said. The company that organised the duo's trip said it had "no role at all in morphing the photos."

Nepalese authorities said their investigation found that Yadav and Goswami had reached an elevation of more than 27,000 feet, about 2,000 feet short of the summit. That height is known as the "death zone," where the air is so thin that even with bottled oxygen, the brain and body begin to fail.

Their guide warned them that their oxygen supply was depleted and that they were not physically fit enough to reach the summit, and they were rescued, the investigation found.

Lakpa Sherpa, a rescuer who was part of the operation, said both Yadav and Goswami were running out of supplemental oxygen and their condition was worsening fast.

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