Mountaineer Dawa Sherpa’s wife Damu Sherpa (right) and daughter Mendo Lhamu Sherpa wait outside the intensive care unit at HAMS Hospital in Kathmandu yesterday. (AFP)
The family of a Nepali climber who dragged himself off Mount Everest six days after being abandoned called for an investigation into rescue efforts, as doctors said yesterday he is in a stable condition and recovering in hospital.
Mountaineer Dawa Sherpa, 57, vanished in bitter conditions on the upper reaches of the world’s highest mountain early on May 30.
His family thought he was dead, and had even begun ritual mourning prayers.
He was found crawling towards Base Camp on Thursday morning by the Sagarmatha Pollution Control Committee (SPCC), a Nepali team that helps set routes on Everest and clean up waste left behind.
Dawa Sherpa, also known as “Hillary” after the famed climber Edmund Hillary, was flown to the capital Kathmandu, where he is being treated for frostbite on his fingers, a fractured thigh bone and severe dehydration, doctors said.
“His clinical condition remains stable, and his dehydration is showing significant improvement,” said Jyotindra Sharma, director of the HAMS Hospital in Kathmandu. He said Dawa Sherpa had survived “extremely challenging conditions” on Everest. “He will remain in the ICU (intensive care unit) for a few more days for ongoing care and observation,” Sharma said in a statement.
Mingmar Tendi Sherpa, who spoke to him soon after his rescue, said Dawa Sherpa told him he had fallen into a crevasse, from which he was unable to escape until an avalanche filled it in.
“He said that he spent two-and-a-half days in the crevasse. Having lost his gear, he was unable to get out and survived on ice and biscuits he had in his suit,” he told AFP.
His remarkable survival was greeted with jubilation by his family, who also said they were angry at what they described as the failure of rescue teams to locate him earlier.
His wife, Damu Sherpa, told AFP of her joy when she was sent a photograph as he was flown to the capital. “I do not remember how this week went — we thought he was no more, and had already begun his last rites,” she said as she waited to meet him at the hospital. “I was so surprised when I saw the photos and recognised him — he was still wearing a cap I knitted for him.”
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