Dawa Sherpa, Mount Everest
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At least five climbers have died during this Everest season. A U.S. and a Czech climber died on Mount Makalu earlier this month.
Overcrowding, exhaustion, poor decision-making and severe oxygen deprivation continue to turn Everest into one of the deadliest places on Earth.
A DEAF BBC presenter was left fighting for his life in Mount Everest’s brutal “death zone” after becoming separated from his guide at nearly 29,000ft. Mount Everest conqueror
Hillary Dawa Sherpa, an experienced high-altitude guide, went missing on May 30 while descending from the summit of the world’s highest peak,
Mount Everest, the most famous summit in the world, welcomes hundreds of people every year. Some don't make it out alive. The iconic mountain, which has seen more than 300 climbing deaths, has already had two tragic deaths so far this year.
HUGE queues are clogging up Mount Everest’s “Death Zone” as the highest mountain on earth is hit with a record season of climbers. Pictures and video from those scaling the icon
Arun Kumar Tiwari, a Hyderabad-based tech professional, died near the Hillary Step while descending from Everest. His family chose to leave his body on the mountain as recovery from the death zone is nearly impossible and extremely dangerous.
Sherpa rescued after going missing on Everest with no food, oxygen A Nepali Sherpa guide has been rescued from Everest after surviving about a week on the slopes of the world's highest mountain without food or oxygen in a rare case of survival in ...
While advanced technology has tamed the elements, massive summit bottlenecks and corner-cutting budget operators are stretching safety on the world’s highest peak.
A 52-year-old Sherpa guide, Dawa 'Hillary' Sherpa, presumed dead on Mount Everest after vanishing on May 29, was miraculously found alive six days later near Base Camp. He survived over 12km of treacherous terrain without supplies,