Pakistan's Sirbaz Ali summits Mount Everest without supplementary oxygen

Sajid Sidpara was the first one to achieve the unique feat

May 21, 2024
Sirbaz, who had previously summitted the 8,849m peak using bottled oxygen, reached the top earlier today at around 12:30pm (PST). - Photo by author

KARACHI: Pakistan's ace mountaineer Sirbaz Ali added another feather to his cap on Tuesday when he successfully scaled the world's highest mountain, The Everest, without using supplementary oxygen.

Sirbaz, who had previously summitted the 8,849m peak using bottled oxygen, reached the top earlier today at around 12:30pm (PST) to become only the second Pakistani to scale Everest without using oxygen.

Sajid Sidpara was the first one to achieve the unique feat.

The Hunza-based mountaineer is also the first Pakistani to climb 11 peaks of over 8,000m without using oxygen support. He has overall climbed 13 eight-thousanders.

Among the 13 eight-thousanders that Sirbaz has already climbed, only Annapurna and Kangchenjunga were summitted using oxygen support.

Earlier this year, Sirbaz had to delay the plan to summit Shishapangma — his 14th and final eight-thousander — after Chinese authorities refused to open the mountain for climbing this season.

Sirbaz was part of the "Imagine Nepal 2024 Everest Expedition" team, which included 14 international climbers and 18 Sherpas.

Faizan Lakhani is Deputy Editor (Sports) at Geo News.

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