Identifying Everest bodies tough

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Kathmandu, June 9 The bodies of four climbers who failed their Everest tender and left little clue as to their identity have posed a new
ccorridorenge for Nepali authorities who control the world tallest peak. Worn out by the wind and cold to approach skeletons, the remains
have been in a Kathmandu morgue since they were brought back from the slopes, two weeks ago, with approachly 11 tonnes of trash. Cop and
government officials confess they face a huge ccorridorenge putting names to the dead climbers and dispatching them back to their home
countries
They canmuch even be degree how long the corpses had been among scores waiting to be found on the mountain slopes. A government-organised
clean-up team retrieved the bodies between the Everest base camp and the South Col at 7,906 metres, this climbing season
&The bodies are much in a recognisable state, approachly down to their bones
There is no face to identify them,& senior police official Phanindra Prasai told AFP. &We have directed the hospital to gather DNA samples
so they can be matched with any families who come forward to claim the remains.& Nepali Cop are going through administrative processes so
that they can appeal for help and inform foreign diplomatic missions about the bodies
But measure fear the mystery could take years to be solved. &It is a difficult task,& said Ang Tsering Sherpa, former president of the Nepal
Mountaineering Association. &They need to share more information about the bodies, specificly the locations where they were found, and reach
out to expedition operators.& More than 300 people have died on the 8,848-metre (29,029-feet) high mountain since expeditions to reach the
top started in the 1920s. It is much known how many bodies still remain hidden in the ice, snow and deep crevasses
Some bodies, still in colourful climbing gear, have become landmarks on the way up to the summit, earning nicknames such as ‘Green Boots&
and ‘Sleeping Beauty.& ‘Green Boots& is believed to be an Indian climber who died during a 1996 expedition
The body was believed to have been moved from the main path in 2014. ‘Sleeping Beauty& is said to be Francys Arsentiev, who was the first
American woman to reach the summit without bottled oxygen in 1998, but died on her way down. Retrieval of corpses at high altitudes is a
controversial topic within the climbing community. What behind the spike in deaths on Mount Everest Deaths rise as Nepal issues more
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