A Nepalese mountain guide has cheated death after surviving six days stranded on Everest with nothing but two chocolate bars and handfuls of ice. Sources close to the rescue operation confirm the man, a 28-year-old climbing sherpa, was discovered by a British expedition team who were stunned to find him conscious and coherent despite spending nearly a week in the death zone. The grim arithmetic of Everest is well known: above 8,000 metres, the body consumes itself. The average survival window without supplementary oxygen is measured in hours, not days. Yet this man endured, and the climbers who found him were forced to make a decision that would define their own ascent.
Documents obtained by this newspaper reveal the guide had been separated from his client during a sudden storm on the Lhotse Face. He fell into a crevasse and was presumed dead. For six days, he crawled, huddled and waited. He melted snow on his tongue and rationed the chocolate bars like they were gold bullion. When the British team stumbled upon his makeshift shelter, they had already passed the point of no return for their own summit bid. They gave him their emergency oxygen, radioed base camp and stayed with him through the night, aborting their own climb.
This is not a story of triumph on the peak. It is a story of the ugly calculus of high altitude commerce. Every season, hundreds of paying clients with more money than experience ascend the mountain, and the sherpas who carry their equipment, mend their tents and fix their ropes are the invisible gears of this industry. Their names rarely make the headlines. Their deaths are recorded in the small print of insurance claims. The British team did what any decent human being would do, but they are already being hailed as heroes. The man they saved? He will likely be back on the mountain next season, because that is how the system works.
Insiders within the guiding community have spoken to this newspaper under condition of anonymity. They describe a world where profit margins are razor thin and the pressure to push on is relentless. The British climbers made the right call, but they are the exception. For every group that turns back to aid a stranger, there are a dozen that step over the fallen because the summit bonus is too large to forfeit. The guide’s survival feels like a miracle, but it is also a damning indictment of an industry that treats its hired helpers as expendable.
The Nepalese government has promised an investigation. Do not hold your breath. The authorities have consistently looked the other way while the mountain’s true cost is paid in bodies and broken families. The British team has returned to Kathmandu, their summit dreams dashed, but their reputations intact. They deserve our respect. But spare a thought for the man they saved. He will go home to a village that depends on his income. He will heal, and then he will climb again. Because in the shadow of the world’s tallest peak, there is no room for sentiment. There is only the next mountain, the next season, the next chance to survive.









