Mountaineer Sajid Ali Sadpara, son of renowned high-altitude climber Muhammad Ali Sadpara, successfully scaled the world's eighth highest peak - Mount Manaslu - in Nepal without the aid of supplementary oxygen.
Sajid has become the first Pakistani to climb the 'True Summit' of Manaslu. Mount Manaslu is 8,163 metres above sea level. It is in the Mansiri Himal, part of the Nepalese Himalayas, in the west-central part of Nepal. The name Manaslu means "mountain of the spirit".
Alhamdulliah, Sajid has summited Mt Manaslu 8163m world’s 8th highest mountain without oxygen this afternoon and is first Pakistan to climb to the True Summit
— Sajid Ali Sadpara (@sajid_sadpara) September 26, 2022
Congratulations Pakistan 🇵🇰 #Manaslu2022 pic.twitter.com/tEFDK7autj
Before Sajid achieved the feat, his expedition reportedly avoided an avalanche which struck below C-4. He had crossed 8,000m at this time.
There has been an avalanche on Mt Manaslu below C-4.
— Sajid Ali Sadpara (@sajid_sadpara) September 26, 2022
Sajid Sadpara is Alhamdullilah safe and fine, as they have already crossed 8000m. More details to follow. Wish everybody safe climb
Requests for prayers and good wishes Pakistan 🇵🇰 #Manaslu2022 pic.twitter.com/QXSkgqhofR
Sajid has already summited K2 (8,611m) twice. The mountaineer has also climbed the peaks of Gasherbrum-I (8,080m) and Gasherbrum-II (8,035m) without additional oxygen.
In July last year, it was reported that Sajid had retrieved the bodies of three missing climbers including his father, who went missing while attempting to summit K2 in February 2021, from the ‘Bottleneck’ and secured them at Camp-4.
According to Sajid and government officials, the bodies were spotted below the Bottleneck by Sherpas.
Ali Sadpara, along with two colleagues – John Snorri Sigurjónsson from Iceland, and Juan Pablo Mohr Prieto from Chile – were declared dead on Feb 18, nearly two weeks after they went missing on the ‘Savage Mountain’.
The trio had lost contact with the Base Camp on February, 5 while attempting an unprecedented winter ascent without supplemental oxygen.
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