Everest brawl exposes mountaineering’s deep rifts
NEPAL: A brawl on Mount Everest last weekend that shocked the
mountaineering community stems from tension between elite climbers and
growing commercial expeditions on the world’s highest peak, experts say.
Italy’s Simone Moro and Ueli Steck of Switzerland, two of the world’s
top mountaineers, accompanied by top British alpine photographer
Jonathan Griffith, were involved in a fight with a group of Nepalese
Sherpas on Saturday.
While there are many views on who was to blame, all agree the spark
was a decision by the Europeans to climb the Lhotse Face, a steep ice
wall, while the Nepalese guides were rigging up ropes for their
commercial clients.
Last year, hundreds of commercial climbers were famously photographed
as they queued to reach the summit, illustrating the huge number of
people who flock to the 8,848-metre (29,029 ft) peak each year.
Expecting similar crowds this season, the Expedition Operators’
Association of Nepal recommended before the start of the 2013 summit
season that Sherpas be sent to fix two sets of ropes -- one for ascent
and one for descent.
“This year the tensions occurred while the Sherpas were beginning to
implement that plan,” Mohan Krishna Sapkota, a spokesman in the Tourism
Ministry, told AFP.
Moro, Steck and Griffith say they did not interfere with the
rope-rigging and they deny as “highly unlikely” allegations that they
dislodged ice that hit the rope-fixing Sherpa team.
Other climbers say they were either unaware or did not feel bound by
an agreement that no-one else should climb while the Sherpas were busy.
“I know that on the day the ropes are fixed, nobody should hang on
the fixed ropes,” Moro told National Geographic. “This doesn’t mean that
nobody is allowed to climb the mountain.” The spat comes as mountaineers
mark the 60th anniversary of the first Everest summit on May 29, 1953,
by Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay. About 10,000 people have
attempted to climb the ultimate peak, almost 4,000 successfully.
Freddie Wilkinson, a US mountaineer and Everest veteran, told AFP
that the disagreement highlighted rising friction caused by the
competing interests of elite climbers and commercial adventurers. “Elite
climbers think ropes detract from the sport. On the other side are the
commercial climbing operators who say it’s their right to do business,”
he said in an interview.
AFP |