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Sherpa Rescued After Going Missing on Everest With No Food, Oxygen

KATHMANDU, June 4 (Reuters) – A ⁠Nepali ⁠Sherpa guide has been ⁠rescued from Everest after surviving about a week ​on the slopes of the world’s highest mountain without food or oxygen ‌in a rare case ‌of survival in such conditions, a hiking official said on ⁠Thursday.

Dawa ⁠Sherpa, 52, was returning with a Polish climber after failing ​to reach the 8,849 m (29,032 ft) summit, when he went missing between Camp III and Camp IV.

He was last seen on May 29. ​His client returned to base camp, but it was not clear ⁠how ⁠they got separated.

They were ⁠among ​the last climbers on Everest this season, which ended last month.

Lama Kazi ​Sherpa, of the ⁠Sagarmatha Pollution Control Committee, said his team located Dawa above base camp near the Khumbu Icefall and brought him down to safety. His team was cleaning up after the season ended.

Dawa, still ⁠in a climbing jacket, was rushed from the helipad to hospital ⁠on a trolley.

Dawa’s family said he was doing well and undergoing treatment for frostbite and other complications.

“He recognised me … is good and speaks,” said Mhendo Lhamo Sherpa, the guide’s daughter. “We are happy.”

The Himalayan Times said for seven days the guide had “no food, no bottled oxygen, no rescue team”.

A record number of more than 1,000 climbers and their guides ⁠scaled Everest this season, with the government issuing 494 permits.

Many climbers were stranded at base camp after a towering block of glacial ice delayed the opening of the route ​to the world’s tallest peak in April.

(Reporting by Gopal ​Sharma; Editing by Sharon Singleton)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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