Double amputee climber makes history on Mount Everest

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Double Amputee Climber Makes History On Mount Everest
Hari Budha Magar, 43, has become the first double above-the-knee amputee to summit the world’s tallest mountain.
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By Jacob Phillips, PA

A former Gurkha soldier who lost both his legs in Afghanistan has reached the top of Mount Everest, making mountaineering history.

Hari Budha Magar, 43, has become the first double above-the-knee amputee to summit the world’s tallest mountain.

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The veteran arrived at Everest on April 17th exactly 13 years since his legs were destroyed by an IED in Afghanistan in 2010.

But he had to wait until May 19th to reach the summit, and he was forced to spend 18 days waiting at the Everest base camp for the weather to clear.

Hari Budha Magar Everest attempt
Hari Budha Magar, who has become the first double above-the-knee amputee to summit Mount Everest. Photo: Shanta Nepali Productions/Jeet Bahadur Tamang. 

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While climbing up, the veteran and his crew faced freezing conditions and Mr Budha Magar saw two dead bodies being dragged down.

Even when the conditions were safe to reach the summit, the poor weather meant his sunglasses and oxygen mask were frozen over and he had just a few minutes at the top.

Speaking to the PA news agency from the Mount Everest base camp, he said: “All of my jackets were completely freezing. It was all frozen. Even our warm water, we put hot water in the thermos, and that was also frozen and we were not able to drink.”

He continued: “When I came down we ran out of oxygen. The guys came up with oxygen… I was bumping down on my bum and we had 30, 40 minutes of oxygen, and we still had about two, three hours to get down.”

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Mr Budha Magar first wanted to climb the mountain when he was walking to school barefoot.

He left Nepal to serve as a corporal with the Ghurka regiment in the British army before his life-changing injury.

The veteran said he believed his life was “completely finished” after losing his lower legs and he struggled to climb into a wheelchair or to transfer into a car.

He told PA: “I grew up in Nepal, up to age of 19, and I saw how the disabled people were treated in those remote villages.

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“Many people still think that disability is a sin of previous life and you are the burden of the earth. I believed this myself because that is what I saw. That is how I grew up.”

He continued: “It was a pretty hard time and at one point I was just drinking too much, to just control my pain and emotions and all the things, and I tried to kill myself a couple of times.”

But after trying out a range of sports and adventures with military charities, Mr Budha Magar got his confidence back and gave up drinking.

Originally the veteran planned to climb Everest in 2018 but double amputees and blind people were banned from climbing the mountain in a bid to reduce the number of climbers dying on the peak.

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The veteran helped campaign to have the ban removed so he could attempt to summit the peak.

Since then more double amputees have come to climb in Nepal, says Mr Budha Magar.

To complete the challenge the veteran had to get specially designed prosthetic legs that could cope with the ice and snow, which he describes as his “spider legs”.

He said: “When I climb, I use different legs and we have installed heating socks to make it warm so that I don’t lose any more limbs, because I can’t afford to lose more. I just climb one step at a time.”

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Once he is down from the mountain, Mr Budha Magar is looking forward to spending time with his family at their home in Canterbury.

The veteran also wants to return to Afghanistan to the site when he lost his legs so he can say “thank you”.

He told PA: “Without (losing my legs), I wouldn’t be climbing Everest, so and it wouldn’t even count much. Whatever happens, it happens for good.”

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