Kami Rita Sherpa, a native of Thame village
located in the shadow of Mount Everest, reached the 8,850-metre
(29,035-feet) summit via the Southeast Ridge route, accompanied
by another sherpa, tourism department official Mira Acharya said
from the base camp.
His latest ascent took him two summits clear of two fellow
sherpas, hiking officials said.
Acharya said Kami, who goes by his first name, reached the top
at 7.50 a.m. (0205 GMT) and is now descending to lower camps.
She said about 30 other climbers were on the way to the summit
and were expected to top the peak on Wednesday or Thursday, when
the weather window is expected to remain open.
Kami says he will try and climb the peak two more times.
“I am still strong and want to climb Sagarmatha 25 times,” Kami
had told Reuters before leaving for the mountain in March
referring to the Nepali name for Everest.
The route taken by him was pioneered by New Zealand’s Sir Edmund
Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay when they became the first
climbers to reach the summit in 1953.
Nearly 5,000 climbers have scaled the peak since the pioneering
ascent, many multiple times.
The climbing season ends in May and hundreds of climbers are
currently on Everest, trying to reach the top from both the
Nepali and Tibetan sides of the mountain.
Tourism, which includes mountain climbing, is a main source of
income for cash strapped Nepal, home to eight of the world's 14
highest mountains.
(Reporting by Gopal Sharma; Editing by Martin Howell)
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