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Overview

2019 Mount Everest Deaths refer to the high amount of fatalities that have occurred on Mount Everest in 2019, particularly between May 17th and May 28th of that year. It has been argued that these deaths have been caused by intense overcrowding of the mountain, which has led to criticism of the Nepalese government for not capping the amount of climbers of the mountain at one time and of the climbers themselves for not understanding the difficulty of their undertaking.

Background

On May 17th, 2019, Indian climber Ravi[1] died while climbing Mount Everest. Over the following ten days, ten more climbers perished: Seamus Lawless, Kalpana Das, Nihal Bagwan, Donald Lynn Cash, Anjali Kulkarni, Kevin Hynes, Dhruba Bista, Ernst Landgraf, and Christopher John Kulish. During the week of May 20th, climbers entered a queue to reach the summit in an area known to climbers as the "death zone" due to its high altitude, where humans cannot survive for long without extra oxygen supplies. A photo of the queue was taken by Twitter user and climber @Nimsdai[2] (shown below).

picture of people in a long queue to reach Everest summit

Developments

The death of Christopher John Kulish, an American lawyer from Colorado, helped the overcrowding of Everest receive media attention, as outlets including CNN,[1] The New York Times,[3] and BBC[4] covered the story. Critics have pointed out that the Nepalese government issued a record 381 permits, which cost $11,000 each, to climbers this climbing season, which helped contribute to the overcrowding.[5] Nepal has stated it will not limit permits in future climbing seasons. Additionally, storms limited the ideal climbing dates to only a few days, which contributed to the crowding. There are also competing companies of Nepalese climbing guides, some of which have been criticized as inexperienced to handle situations like the extended queue at the summit.[6] Climber Elia Saikaly described literally stepping over bodies to reach the summit.[7] He also argued those issuing climbing permits should test the skill of who they are issuing to, as inexperienced climbers may have led to the overcrowding, and thus the fatalities.

Online Presence

There have been some jokes online about the fatalities. The Onion[8] posted a satirical article titled "World Populace Actually Fine With Rich People Dying On Mount Everest." Twitter user @PatrickLenton[9] tweeted a similar joke, gaining over 70 retweets and 380 likes (shown below, left). User @Boring_as_heck made a joke about people getting caught in the "death zone," gaining over 1,200 retweets and 12,000 likes (shown below, right)

tweet jokingly thanking Everest mountain for killing rich people
tweet joking about rich people dying in Everest Death Zone

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2019 Mount Everest Deaths

2019 Mount Everest Deaths

Updated Aug 13, 2019 at 01:20AM EDT by Adam.

Added May 29, 2019 at 02:26PM EDT by Adam.

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Overview

2019 Mount Everest Deaths refer to the high amount of fatalities that have occurred on Mount Everest in 2019, particularly between May 17th and May 28th of that year. It has been argued that these deaths have been caused by intense overcrowding of the mountain, which has led to criticism of the Nepalese government for not capping the amount of climbers of the mountain at one time and of the climbers themselves for not understanding the difficulty of their undertaking.

Background

On May 17th, 2019, Indian climber Ravi[1] died while climbing Mount Everest. Over the following ten days, ten more climbers perished: Seamus Lawless, Kalpana Das, Nihal Bagwan, Donald Lynn Cash, Anjali Kulkarni, Kevin Hynes, Dhruba Bista, Ernst Landgraf, and Christopher John Kulish. During the week of May 20th, climbers entered a queue to reach the summit in an area known to climbers as the "death zone" due to its high altitude, where humans cannot survive for long without extra oxygen supplies. A photo of the queue was taken by Twitter user and climber @Nimsdai[2] (shown below).


picture of people in a long queue to reach Everest summit

Developments

The death of Christopher John Kulish, an American lawyer from Colorado, helped the overcrowding of Everest receive media attention, as outlets including CNN,[1] The New York Times,[3] and BBC[4] covered the story. Critics have pointed out that the Nepalese government issued a record 381 permits, which cost $11,000 each, to climbers this climbing season, which helped contribute to the overcrowding.[5] Nepal has stated it will not limit permits in future climbing seasons. Additionally, storms limited the ideal climbing dates to only a few days, which contributed to the crowding. There are also competing companies of Nepalese climbing guides, some of which have been criticized as inexperienced to handle situations like the extended queue at the summit.[6] Climber Elia Saikaly described literally stepping over bodies to reach the summit.[7] He also argued those issuing climbing permits should test the skill of who they are issuing to, as inexperienced climbers may have led to the overcrowding, and thus the fatalities.

Online Presence

There have been some jokes online about the fatalities. The Onion[8] posted a satirical article titled "World Populace Actually Fine With Rich People Dying On Mount Everest." Twitter user @PatrickLenton[9] tweeted a similar joke, gaining over 70 retweets and 380 likes (shown below, left). User @Boring_as_heck made a joke about people getting caught in the "death zone," gaining over 1,200 retweets and 12,000 likes (shown below, right)


tweet jokingly thanking Everest mountain for killing rich people tweet joking about rich people dying in Everest Death Zone

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Top Comments

Peanut970
Peanut970

When I imagine Mt. Everest, I usually imagine a tall mountain, and a single bloke on it reciting poetry before he begins his permanent cosplay as an icicle.

Never in my whole life did I imagine the place to be OVERCROWDED of all things it could be!

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