Crew
member Phurba Sherpa (no relation to the journalist of the same name)
fell to his death. The 25-year-old had been working to fix a route about
150 meters near the summit when he fell, according to Mingma Sherpa,
the Nepal rescue team leader who was at the Everest Base Camp.
Friday
Eric
Arnold, 36, of the Netherlands died at night while heading back after a
successful summit on Everest, according to Tashi Lakpa Sherpa, the
owner of Seven Summit Treks. A heart attack was suspected, he said.
Arnold was a triathlete based in Rotterdam, according to
his Twitter bio.
Saturday
An
Australian woman Maria Strydom who was also traveling with the Seven
Summit Treks started suffering altitude sickness. She had reached Camp
IV, the final camp before the summit.
Strydom,
34, could not move upward anymore, and a rescue attempt to reach her
failed, according to Tashi Sherpa. The finance professor at Monash
Business School in Australia died Saturday before she could come back
down to Camp III.
She gave an
interview with the school in March detailing her ambition to climb the highest seven summits on each of the continents. She had already climbed
Denali in Alaska,
Aconcagua in Argentina, Mount Ararat in eastern Turkey and Kilimanjaro
in Africa. She had planned to climb Everest with her husband, inspired
in part by questions the couple received about their vegan diet.
Her
mother, Maritha Strydom, who had been posting updates about her
daughter and son-in-law's expedition, said on Facebook: "I'm just too
devastated to communicate, sorry."
She posted hours later that she was "praying" for her son-in-law, who
the Australian media reported was battling "against congestive heart failure."
Sunday
Subash
Paul, 44, died at Base Camp II from altitude sickness, according to
Wangchu Sherpa, Managing Director of Trekking Camp Nepal.
Paul
was part of a team (consisting of four Indian climbers and four
Sherpas) that also saw two members -- Paresh Chandra Nath and Goutam
Ghosh -- go missing Saturday night.
"It
is not clear what happened. We believe the weather suddenly
deteriorated at some point, and the team lost direction," Wanchu Sherpa
said.
An official at Nepal Tourism
Department Gyanendra Shrestha said a helicopter search was not possible
because they were too high up the mountain.
"We are trying to communicate with other expedition teams around that level to locate the missing climbers," Shresthra said.
The fourth climber from the team, Sunita Harizan, was rescued and is undergoing treatment at base camp.
SOURCE CNN.
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