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		Nepali scales 14 highest peaks in just over six months, becomes world’s 
		fastest climber
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		[October 29, 2019] 
		By Gopal Sharma
 KATHMANDU (Reuters) - A 36-year-old Nepali 
		became the fastest climber to summit the world's 14 highest mountains on 
		Tuesday, scaling all the mountains in just over six months, his hiking 
		agency said, a feat other climbers have taken several years to complete.
 
 Nirmal Purja scaled Mount Shishapangma at 8,027 meters (26,335 feet) in 
		Tibet, six months and one week after he climbed his first in the 
		campaign, Mount Annapurna I, kicking off his “Project Possible”.
 
 Mingma Sherpa of the Seven Summit Treks agency that provided logistics 
		to Purja's team said he was accompanied by three sherpa climbers to the 
		Sishapangma summit.
 
 “Mission achieved,” Purja posted on his Instagram from the summit in 
		Tibet, the world's 14th highest mountain.
 
 Agency official Sherpa said all summiteers were on their way to base 
		camp and expected to return to Kathmandu this week. "This is the world 
		record," he said.
 
 After climbing Annapurna, the tenth highest peak, on April 23, Purja 
		took on the other "8,000ers", climbing Dhaulagiri, Kanchenjunga, 
		Everest, Lhotse and Makalu in the following month.
 
 He then went to Pakistan, where he climbed Nanga Parbat, Gasherbrum I, 
		Gasherbrum II, K2, and the Broad Peak.
 
 Purja climbed another two peaks in Nepal - Cho Oyu and Manaslu before 
		heading to Tibet, climbing officials said.
 
 Of the world's 14 highest peaks eight are in Nepal, five in Pakistan and 
		one in Tibet.
 
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			Nirmal Purja, attempting a record to climb fourteen 8000-meter 
			mountain peaks in seven months speaks during a news conference after 
			climbing six mountains including Mt. Everest in Kathmandu, Nepal May 
			28, 2019. REUTERS/Navesh Chitrakar 
            
 
            Climbing experts say barely over three dozen mountaineers have 
			climbed all the 14 peaks so far.
 The record for the fastest ascent was previously held by South 
			Korean Kim Chang-ho who completed all "8,000ers" in seven years, 10 
			months and six days, said blogger Alan Arnette.
 
 Purja, who served with British special forces as a Gorkha from 
			Nepal, in May took a photograph showing scores of climbers linked up 
			on the summit ridge of Mount Everest, which went viral exposing the 
			traffic jam in the so-called death zone of the world’s highest 
			mountain.
 
 That photograph led the Nepali government to draft a new set of 
			climbing rules aimed at reducing the crowd on Everest, following 
			criticism by climbers who said it was undermining the safety and 
			issuing permits to anyone who paid $11,000.
 
 (Reporting by Gopal Sharma; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani and Michael 
			Perry)
 
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