KATHMANDU — The body of a Russian climber, who died on Mt Everest on Saturday evening, becoming the second casualty of the spring climbing season on the world’s tallest peak, was airlifted to Kathmandu on Sunday.
Pavel Kostrikin’s body will be handed over to his family, said Bhishma Raj Bhattarai, an official at the Department of Tourism, the government agency responsible to issue climbing permits and monitor the climbing activities.
“His family is expected to land in Kathmandu tomorrow or the day after tomorrow to take the body,” said Bhattarai.
The Russian climber, 55, died at Camp I at 6,065 meters.
According to Bhattarai, the Russian fell sick at Camp II when he was acclimatizing.
He was immediately rushed to Camp I where he died.
Nepal has so far issued permits for 28 Russian climbers. Among them, 17 permits have been issued to climb Everest.
In March, the Ukrainian Embassy in New Delhi issued a diplomatic request urging Nepal to forbid Russian climbers from entering the country.
But most of the agencies the Post spoke to said they have not received any official letter—either from the government or the embassy in Delhi.
Even the Nepali embassy in New Delhi said it is not aware of such a letter.
The Everest climbing season has formally started after a team of 11 Nepali high-altitude climbing guides reached the summit of Everest on Saturday evening.
The mountaineering officials said that the commercial climbing will begin from Monday onwards, depending on the weather.
The department has so far issued 316 permits for climbing Everest for this spring which last until May-end, before the monsoon sets in the country. Last year, Nepal issued permits for a record 408 climbers.
Operators said that the reduction in the numbers of Chinese climbers and the Russian-Ukraine war has reduced the number of Everest climbers this year.
The Russian is the second casualty on Everest after, on April 14, Ngimi Tenji Sherpa’s death near the Khumbu Icefall.
Sherpa was carrying equipment to Camp II and was found in a sitting position.
At least 295 people have died on Everest as of 2021, 197 on Nepal’s side, according to the Himalayan Database that archives a comprehensive record of all expeditions.
Close to 7,000 mountaineers have climbed Everest from the Nepal side since Tenzing Norgay Sherpa and New Zealander Edmund Percival Hillary first set foot atop the world’s highest peak in May 1953.
A climbing permit for Everest costs $11,000 for foreigners. But climbers end up spending between $40,000 and $90,000 to climb the mountain.
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