KATHMANDU: An Australian mountaineer who narrowly escaped the deadliest accident ever on Mount Everest says some local guides and climbers were questioning whether to scrap their summit plans after 13 Nepalese were killed in an avalanche.
Gavin Turner was scaling the treacherous Khumbu Icefall with his sherpa guide when he saw the avalanche strike climbers just ahead of him, at an altitude of about 5,800 meters.
“We saw it approach… it was an extremely close call, a matter of minutes,” Turner told AFP in a phone interview from Everest base camp.
As news of the accident sent shockwaves among mountaineers, most of the sherpas on the mountain gathered their belongings and left, leaving the world’s highest peak deserted but for tents packed with western climbers stunned by the disaster.
The accident underscores the huge risks borne by local guides, who ascend the icy slopes of the 8,848-metre peak, often in pitch-dark and usually weighed down by tenting equipment, ropes and food supplies for their clients.
The nature of their work means that sherpas will usually make many more trips up the mountain and expose themselves to far greater risk than foreign climbers who pay tens of thousands of dollars to summit the peak.
While rescue helicopters buzzed overhead, plucking snow-blanketed bodies out of the mountain to base camp using cables suspended from the aircraft, hundreds of sherpas said they wanted to take a break from the climb.
Some said they would not come back at all this season.
“My sherpa said he won’t be returning – he has a wife and a two-year-old son and the love of his family outweighed any financial reward,” Turner said.-AFP