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For most people, hearing the name Mount Everest brings to mind images of a pristine snow capped peak, perhaps with a brave climber standing atop it with an arm raised in triumph. After all, this person must have reached the pinnacle of human achievement by ascending the worlds highest mountain.

Does it get any better than that?

This idyllic view of Everest is slowly being erased, however, as stories about the mountains harsh realities make the rounds on social media. Its already widely understood that not everyone who tries to make it to the top of the world makes it back down. But thats only the beginning of the drama.

Located between Nepal and Tibet, Mount Everest is the worlds tallest peak. This majestic mountain sits at 29,029 feet above sea level. Oxygen is so thin at the top that its called the death zone. This is where even the most experienced climbers succumb to their bodies breaking down and for some, that means extreme sickness or even death.

Since the 1900s, more than 300 people have died trying to scale the icy terrain of Everest. Per an Insider report, 2023 is shaping up to be a particularly deadly year, with 12 climbers pronounced dead already and 5 still missing. Two factors contributing to these high rates of fatality are altitude sickness and overcrowding on the mountain.

Westend61. Getty Images.

Despite its risks, climbing Mount Everest has become more popular than ever blame it on social media, boredom, or just people inherently wanting to one-up each other. No matter the reason, the increased interest in scaling the worlds highest peak is now so extreme that new guidelines were instituted for this year.

These rules include stipulations prohibiting solo climbers (everyone must have a trained sherpa). All climbers must have successfully climbed a peak at least 7,000 feet high previously. People over 75, double amputees, and blind persons are all prohibited from climbing.

Its all part of an effort to stop overcrowding. Filmmaker and director Jennifer Peedom told Insider, It is extremely overcrowded now and just getting more and more every year.

The publication noted that Nepal issued a record 463 permits to people who want to climb Mount Everest during the 2023 season, meaning about 900 people will jostle to reach the summit this year alone. Things get dicey in May when wind dies down and temperatures warm. This is when theres a literal line up the mountain, with climbers pushing their way to the top.

Many people are aware of the fact that Everest is littered with dead bodies because its too costly and dangerous to remove them. But what fewer observers realize is that the mountain is also littered with trash. And theres a lot of it.

A video of the garbage-strewn base camp went viral on Instagram in mid-May, just ahead of the 70th anniversary of Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgays ascending Everest for the first time on May 29, 1953. The duo is believed to be the first to reach the mountains peak.

Jam Press Vid/@tenzi_sherpa1999

The post came from mountain guide Tenzi Sherpa, who has been guiding climbers to the summit since 2019. The dirtiest camp I have ever seen, he wrote in the caption .

I think the government should make strict rules for those who leave trash [on Mount Everest], and a more effective cleaning campaign project should be held, the guide told Newsweek about his video post.

As concerning as the trash piles are among the white snow, the sherpas video isnt even the strangest story to come from Everest this season. That title belongs to the tale of a guide who allegedly saved a dying climbers life only to have the man supposedly block him later on social media.

The story goes that Malaysian climber Ravichandran, who goes by the name Ravichandran Everest or Ravi, was attempting to scale Everest when he succumbed to altitude sickness and collapsed not far from the summit. Video footage shows Gelje Sherpa, who had been climbing with a different client when he came upon the body, wrapping a mattress around the man and strapping the climber onto his back. He abandoned his own clients summit push to hike the man down to safety.

Footage of the incident was shared by Twitter user Visakan Veerasamy. The video went viral and has been watched more than 1.3 million times. there's an incredible story going on in the mountaineering community rn. there's a Malaysian climber who was at death's door, and was rescued by a sherpa who risked his own life to carry his lifeless body on his back for 6 hours. The climber then blocked the sherpa on Instagram https://t.co/AJW70vJ3Kr

Visakan Veerasamy (@visakanv) June 4, 2023

Gelje shared on Instagram on May 20: You may all be wondering where is the summit photo? Unfortunately no summit yet. At the Balcony during our summit push around 8,300m I saw someone in danger.

A man who needed rescuing and no one else was helping. I made the decision to cancel our clients summit push so that I could bring him down to safety before he died up there alone. I carried him myself all the way down to Camp 4 where a rescue team helped from then on. I will be back up the mountain soon after regaining energy from a huge task but I am so happy to say he is alive and recovering in hospital.

But just after this incredible story came to light, Ravi allegedly blocked Gelje on social media and refused to acknowledge his assistance. He posted about the incident several days later after getting a lot of negative attention on social media.

Sherpas are people who are so committed and dedicated to their clients especially coming from 14 Peaks Expedition Co. & The Seven Summit Expedition Co. They never leave you behind. I experienced it this year. When descending from [the] summit, I had difficulty. Tashi heard that I [was] in trouble, he organised the rescue team (Mingma Tendi, Gelje Sherpa, Nima Dorchi, Nima Tashi, Dawa Sherpa and Dipen Bhote). They are high altitude sherpas who make lots of sacrifices for their clients. They brought me to 7300 meter[s] for Heli Pick-up for a quick Heli flight to Hospital. Sherpas are important in my 8000 meter expeditions, he wrote.

Gelje Sherpa responded by saying in the comments, Thank you [clasped hands emoji] hope you are recovering well.

Daring rescues aside, theres no denying that climbing Mount Everest has changed a lot in the past seven decades since it began. Anyone seeking to reach the top of the world today should first know what theyre in for.

Theres sort of this idea that theres only one mountain that really matters in the kind of Western, popular imagination, Peedom told Business Insider. Shes climbed the mountain four times, but said the modern experience is nothing compared to what it used to be.

There seems to be a disaster mystique around Everest that seems to only serve to heighten the allure of the place, she told the publication. It is extremely overcrowded now and just getting more and more every year.

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Politics

Met Police chief ‘frustrated’ at planned protest to support Palestine Action – as government moves to ban the group

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Met Police chief 'frustrated' at planned protest to support Palestine Action - as government moves to ban the group

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley says he is “shocked and frustrated” at a planned protest in support of Palestine Action.

The demonstration, due to take place in Westminster later, comes as the government moves to ban the group under anti-terror laws.

Activists from Palestine Action hit the headlines last week after targeting RAF Brize Norton and damaging two military aircraft in a significant security breach.

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Why did activists target an RAF base?

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper will update MPs on the move to proscribe the organisation, which would make it a criminal offence to belong to or support it.

Sir Mark said that – until this happens – the force has “no power in law” to prevent the protest from taking place, but lawbreakers will be “dealt with robustly”.

He added: “This is an organised extremist criminal group, whose proscription as terrorists is being actively considered.

“Members are alleged to have caused millions of pounds of criminal damage, assaulted a police officer with a sledgehammer and last week claimed responsibility for breaking into an airbase and damaging aircraft.

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“Multiple members of the group are awaiting trial accused of serious offences.”

He added that – while the right to protest is essential – “actions in support of such a group go beyond what most would see as a legitimate protest”.

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Handout photo issued by Palestine Action of damage to Trump Turnberry, which has been vandalised by activists. Palestine Action described it as a 'direct response to the US administration's stated intent to ethnically cleanse Gaza'. Issue date: Saturday March 8, 2025. The golf course in South Ayrshire, owned by the US president, was targeted overnight, with activists painting Gaza Is Not For Sale in three-metre high letters on the lawn, and damaging the greens including the course's most prestig
Image:
Trump’s golf course in Ayrshire was vandalised by Palestine Action. Pic: PA

Over the weekend, Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds said he could not rule out the possibility of a foreign power being behind Palestine Action.

Any move to proscribe the group must be debated and approved by MPs and peers.

Speaking to Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips on Sky News, former justice secretary Lord Charlie Falconer suggested that vandalising aircraft would not solely provide legal justification for such a move.

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Plans to ban activist group criticised

Lord Falconer said: “I am not aware of what Palestine Action has done beyond the painting of things on the planes in Brize Norton, they may have done other things I didn’t know.

“But generally, that sort of demonstration wouldn’t justify proscription so there must be something else that I don’t know about.”

Palestine Action has staged a series of protests in recent months – spraying the offices of Allianz Insurance in London, and vandalising Donald Trump’s golf course in Ayrshire.

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US

Regime change: Is Trump about to ‘Make Iran Great Again’?

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Regime change: Is Trump about to 'Make Iran Great Again'?

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The US bombs Iran. Three nuclear sites heavily hit. Cue condemnation from Iran – and promises of retribution.

As the Iranian foreign minister heads to Moscow to meet Vladimir Putin and discuss what to do next, we ask: what has happened, why did the Trump administration decide to take action, what’s the response domestically and internationally – and what on earth could happen next.

If you’ve got a question you’d like the Trump100 team to answer, you can email it to trump100@sky.uk.

Don’t forget, you can also watch all episodes on our YouTube channel.

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US

The Americans want the attack on Iran’s nuclear sites to be a ‘one-and-done’

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The Americans want the attack on Iran's nuclear sites to be a 'one-and-done'

The Pentagon briefing was big on what happened but short on detail of what happens next.

Neither defence secretary Pete Hegseth nor General Dan “Raisin” Caine, chair of the joint chiefs of staff, can answer that.

Mr Hegseth called the bombing an “incredible and overwhelming success” with “focused and clear” instructions from President Trump.

The focus now is on what follows and that’s not so clear.

The briefing laid out the details of the military deception plan behind Operation Midnight Hammer.

B-2 stealth aircraft were flown west towards the Pacific on Saturday as a decoy, while the B-2s with bunker-busting bombs on board flew east towards Iran.

Israel-Iran live: World continues to react to US attack on nuclear facilities

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What is Operation ‘Midnight Hammer’?

Mr Hegseth called it a plan that took months and weeks of positioning and came down, in the end, to “precision, misdirection and operational security”.

Gen Caine, Mr Trump’s top military man, offered a measured assessment. While Mr Trump had spoken of Iran’s nuclear sites being “obliterated”, Gen Caine revised that downwards when he spoke of “extremely severe damage”.

Full battle damage assessment will reveal the complete picture – only then can the mission’s success be measured in full, mindful that Iran had shifted at least some of its enriched uranium in the days before the strike.

On the politics of it, Mr Hegseth said this wasn’t about regime change in Iran. It might offer precious little reassurance to Tehran, particularly as he also said part of the operation was to defend Israel and the ongoing defence of Israel.

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What next after US-Iran strikes?

If the US is tethered to Israel’s interests to the extent of an unprecedented attack on Iran, where does its influence end?

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu appeared almost giddy in response to the US attack. He is a PM strengthened by Mr Trump’s spectacular response to his rhetoric around Iran.

Suspicions weren’t softened around Netanyahu’s influence over Mr Trump when Mr Hegseth was asked about the basis for the attack. He has long lobbied the US president on Iran being close to building a nuclear bomb, contrary to American intelligence which indicates otherwise.

Mr Hegseth was asked what was the new intelligence, was it American or from other countries? He avoided a direct answer, saying only that Mr Trump had looked at all the intelligence information and concluded Iran was a threat.

There were a number of questions about what comes next, with an assortment of non-answers in response from Mr Hegseth.

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Starmer reacts to US strikes on Iran

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A consistent line was that the US wanted Iran to negotiate peace, coupled with the threat of further aggression if it doesn’t.

The US defence secretary said Washington was in touch with Tehran privately and publicly, giving it every opportunity to come to the table, every opportunity for peace.

He made the point that America hadn’t targeted Iranian troops or civilians – clearly, a measure by the US to limit response and leave open a door.

The Americans want this attack to have been a “one-and-done”.

The scenario it’s left with, however, is an Iran talking of a diplomatic door closed and sending its foreign minister travelling to Moscow to meet Vladimir Putin.

Iran is wounded, no doubt. Combined attacks have left it degraded and, without a network of support in the Middle East, its ability to strike back is limited. For now, if not necessarily forever.

Donald Trump clearly enjoyed the sugar rush of military success but he will be wary of the come-down and all of its uncertainties.

In circumstances with world implications, he won’t be alone.

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