An 80-year-old Japanese mountaineer, Yuichiro
Miura, who climbed Mount Everest five years ago, but just missed becoming the
oldest man to reach the summit, has finally claimed the title.
Miura reached the summit days before his rival,
81-year-old Nepalese man Min Bahadur Sherchan, is due to set off on the same
climb.
Public broadcaster NHK showed footage of Miura’s
daughter Emili talking with them via speaker phone in Tokyo, clapping when her
brother told her they had reached the top.
“I made it!” he said over the phone. “I never
imagined I could make it to the top of Mt. Everest at age 80. This is the
world’s best feeling, although I’m totally exhausted. Even at 80, I can still do
quite well.”
The climbers planned to stick around the summit
for about half an hour, take photos and then start to descend, Miura’s Tokyo
office said.
Nepalese mountaineering official Gyanendra
Shrestha, at Everest base camp, confirmed that Miura had reached the summit,
making him the oldest person to do so.
On his expedition’s website, Miura explained his
attempt to scale Everest at such an advanced age: “It is to challenge (my) own
ultimate limit. It is to honour the great Mother Nature.”
He said a successful climb would raise the bar
for what is possible.
“And if the limit of age 80 is at the summit of
Mt. Everest, the highest place on earth, one can never be happier,” he said.
However, if Sherchan is able to follow him, it is
possible that he will only hold the coveted title for a few days. Miura’s
daughter, Emili, said he “doesn’t really care” about the rivalry. “He’s doing it
for his own challenge.”
The situation was not too different five years
ago, when, at the age of 75, Miura sought to recapture the title of oldest man
to summit the mountain. He had set the record in 2003 at age 70, but it was
later broken twice by slightly older Japanese climbers.
He reached the summit on May 26, 2008, at the age
of 75 years and 227 days, according to Guinness World Records. But the record
eluded him because Sherchan scaled the summit the day before, at the age of 76
years and 340 days.
Sherchan, a former Gurkha soldier in the British
army, first began mountaineering in 1960 when he climbed Mount Dhaulagiri, the
26,790-foot high peak in Nepal, according to his grandson, Manoj Guachan. Always
an adventurer, and unbowed by age, he walked the length of Nepal in 2003.LOOD Naija
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