A Nepali sherpa’s harrowing self-rescue from near-death on Mount Everest has been hailed as a miracle, but for British climbers and expedition firms, the episode has exposed uncomfortable truths about safety standards and the human cost of the mountain’s commercial boom. Karma Dorjee, a 34-year-old guide from the Khumbu region, spent over 12 hours crawling down the mountain after a fall left him with a shattered leg and severe frostbite. His survival, against all odds, has prompted fresh scrutiny of the protocols that govern high-altitude mountaineering, particularly for Western operators who hire local sherpas as their backbone.
The incident unfolded last Saturday at the South Col, the final camp before the summit, when Dorjee slipped on an ice shelf and tumbled 300 metres into a crevasse. Left for dead by a party of foreign clients who lacked the skills to rescue him, he managed to crawl out and drag himself to Camp 2, where he was eventually airlifted to a Kathmandu hospital. Doctors say he will lose parts of his fingers and toes, but his life is no longer in danger. “I thought of my family, my children,” Dorjee told reporters from his hospital bed. “I could not let them grow up without a father.”
The story has dominated headlines in Nepal and sparked anger over the treatment of sherpas, who are often paid a fraction of what Western guides earn but carry the greatest risks. Industry insiders say the pressure to summit during the short spring window leads to unsafe decisions, with clients sometimes ignoring the judgment of local guides. “This sherpa’s resilience is remarkable, but it should never have been needed,” said Ngima Wangyal, a former expedition leader and now a safety consultant in Kathmandu. “The system is broken. Profit drives timelines, and safety is an afterthought.”
For UK-based expedition companies, the fallout is immediate. Several major operators, including London-based Mountain High and Adventure Peaks, have already announced reviews of their safety procedures. Questions are being asked about whether all climbers are adequately trained before they reach base camp, and whether sherpas are equipped with modern rescue gear like personal locator beacons and satellite phones. The British Mountaineering Council has urged its members to require independent audits of local partners before booking trips.
The UK’s passion for Everest has grown steadily. According to Nepal’s tourism department, British climbers represented the third-largest nationality group on the mountain in 2024, with 127 permits issued. A typical Everest expedition costs between £30,000 and £70,000 per person, a sum that often includes a sherpa guide. Yet the cut paid to those guides is a fraction of that cost, and their insurance coverage is notoriously patchy.
Critics argue that the very model of guided expeditions fosters a dangerous dependency. Clients, many of whom have limited experience at extreme altitude, rely on sherpas not only for technical support but for route-finding and exhaustion management. When something goes wrong, the local guides pay the price. “We call them the ‘iron horses’ because they carry the weight of an industry,” said Dr. Emily Turner, a Bristol-based sociologist who studies mountaineering labour. “But they are not machines. They are human beings with families, and they deserve the same protections as any worker in a hazardous industry.”
The tragedy of Dorjee’s ordeal is compounded by the near-miraculous nature of his survival. Medical experts say his ability to crawl for hours in subzero temperatures with a broken leg is almost unheard of. But it has also served as a stark reminder that luck is not a safety plan.
For British climbers planning to tackle the world’s highest peak, the message is clear: the risks are real, and the industry that supports them must change. As Wangyal put it, “The mountain does not discriminate. But the system does. We must do better.”








