DAVID SCOTT:<i>
It's the highest point on Earth</i> <i> and the most forbidding,
Nepal's Mount Everest.</i> <i> But every spring,
hundreds of foreign tourists</i> <i> arrive chasing a dream
to stand atop the world.</i> (CHEERS) SCOTT:<i>
Some are experienced climbers.</i> <i> Many are not.</i> <i> But all of them
have this in common.</i> How many of the clients
that you see coming to Everest could do it without you? Um, I would say zero. -SCOTT: Zero?
-Yeah. -SCOTT: None of them?
-None of them. SCOTT:<i> Jangbu Sherpa is a member</i> <i> of the indigenous tribe
known as the Sherpas,</i> <i> the men who make climbing
on Everest possible,</i> <i>carrying the foreigners' luggage
up the mountain,</i> <i>laying a path for them to climb,</i> <i> all but literally
holding their hands.</i> <i> It's a job the Sherpas
were born to do,</i> <i> their bodies
and their work ethic</i> <i> molded by centuries
of living here.</i> <i> But it's also a job
that often kills them.</i> If something goes wrong,
there's nothing you can do. You just depend on your luck
and then just go for it. -Fate?
-Yeah, fate. SCOTT:<i> Over the past five years,</i> <i> 32 Sherpas have been killed</i> <i> as part of guided climbs
on Everest.</i> <i> Thirty-two among
just a few hundred</i> <i> who work there.</i> <i>That makes the job of the Sherpa
per capita</i> <i> the most deadly on Earth.</i> Why would anyone
do such dangerous work? The thing is that, there's no option,
there's no choice. -There's no other work?
-No other work. SCOTT:<i> We met Sherpa
Ang Tshering</i> <i> at the staging point
for any Everest climb,</i> <i> base camp,
17,500 feet above sea level.</i> <i> It is in
these Himalayan mountains</i> <i> where the Sherpas live,</i> <i> in one of the highest
and most remote communities</i> <i> on the planet,
separated from civilization</i> <i> by a wall of mountains.</i> <i> Alone at the top of the world,</i> <i> they have virtually
no other options for work.</i> What percentage would you say
would rather not be here, -risking their lives?
-Eighty to 90 percent, easy. -Nine out of every ten Sherpas
-Yeah. -would rather not be here?
-Yeah. It's trap.
They always say, "I'm not gonna come back
next year," but you can see them find--
You'll find them here again now. SCOTT:
Because they need the money. They need the money. SCOTT:<i> The dangers of the job</i> <i> begin the moment
the Sherpas leave base camp</i> <i> and start their march
into the clouds.</i> The long climb
to the Everest summit starts up that frozen glacier behind me
called the Khumbu Icefall, named for the massive blocks
of ice perched overhead, and poised to fall on climbers
at any moment. Time spent in the ice fall
is borrowed time, <i>because the longer you're in it,</i> <i> the more likely you are
to be buried alive.</i> You can hear all the ice
collapsing. You just think, like, "Yeah,
you don't want to stop. Just keep moving,
keep running... -Running?
-...as fast as you can." On the way down, we do run. The way you get safely through
the ice fall is you go fast. -You don't stop.
-You don't stop. SCOTT:<i> Dr. Ellen Gallant,</i> <i> an American cardiologist
and mountain climber,</i> <i> came to Everest as a client
for the first time in 2014.</i> <i> She remembers her first pass
through the ice fall.</i> DR. ELLEN GALLANT:<i>
Every now and then,</i> <i> there would be
a really loud crack,</i> and you'd hear yelling, and everybody's kind of
looking around, where is it coming from,
what's coming down on us? <i> Stuff is going to come down,
it happens every day,</i> and you just don't want to be
at the wrong place at the wrong time. SCOTT:<i> But foreign climbers
like Dr. Gallant</i> <i>face only a fraction of the risk
of the Sherpas.</i> <i> That's because the Sherpas
don't have to pass through</i> <i> the icefall once or twice,
but up to 30 times,</i> <i> back and forth
through this valley of death.</i> <i> The Sherpas are forced to make
all those trips</i> <i>to carry gear for their clients,</i> <i> which often consists
of dozens of bags</i> <i> packed with
the comforts of home.</i> <i> Many pay to have their Sherpas
carry everything</i> <i> from imported food
to heated tents,</i> <i> to dining tables,
yes, dining tables,</i> <i> on the way up the mountain.</i> -Everything that goes up...
-Yeah. -has to go through the icefall
-Through the icefall. -...on your back.
-Yeah. Yeah. And on the backs
of other Sherpas. It doesn't make sense to me. It shouldn't be too luxurious. You know,
that risks a lot of life. SCOTT:<i>
During the 2014 expedition,
dozens of Sherpas</i> <i> were ferrying gear
through the icefall</i> <i> while their clients
rested at base camp.</i> <i> That's when it happened.</i> I was there at base camp
in my tent and heard a crash,
and unzipped the tent, looked toward
the west shoulder of Everest, and there was a...
a massive plume of ice and snow. It was like, from top,
coming straight down. -In one giant piece of ice.
-Yeah. How big? It was the size of trucks,
or even bigger. SCOTT:<i> Avalanches like this</i> <i> can drop millions of pounds
of solid ice in an instant.</i> After that,
we hear screaming. People screaming everywhere. SCOTT:<i> In the panic, Jangbu
began searching for survivors.</i> I saw this guy
on the left-hand side. Just one guy. -He was alive?
-Yeah, he was alive. Five of us, we started digging
that guy out. We saw the other guys
underneath him, like they are... You know, they're dead. -Stacked on top of each other?
-Stacked. Yeah, stacked on top
of each other. SCOTT:<i> Sixteen Sherpas
were buried to death in ice.</i> <i> The Sherpa community
was left stunned.</i> <i> At the same time,
they were not surprised.</i> Every year,
when these expeditions happen, in every Sherpa household,
every Sherpa's mind... There's always
the sense of dread. When you see the faces
of children before the fathers climb Everest, they're almost
resigned to the fact that, you know, he may not make it
back alive. SCOTT:<i>
Norbu Tenzing should know.</i> <i> His father was Tenzing Norgay,
the very first Sherpa</i> <i> to ever climb Everest,
when he escorted</i> <i> New Zealand climber,
Edmund Hillary</i> <i> up the mountain, in 1953.</i> NARRATOR:<i> The top of the world
has been reached.</i> SCOTT:<i> Tenzing Norgay was
the original Sherpa</i> <i> success story, earning
enough money that his children</i> <i> could have options in life
beyond mountaineering.</i> <i> Today, his son Norbu lives
and works in San Francisco.</i> <i> But Norbu still worries
about his people back home.</i> People's lives are being risked. People are being taken
advantage of. Even if they're getting
something out of it. They're actually giving
a lot more than what they're getting. Including, in some cases,
their own lives. Their own lives. Yeah. Try explaining that to a widow. SCOTT:<i> Pacee Sherpa is
one of the widows</i> <i> of the 2014 avalanche.</i> <i> Today, she lives
in Nepal's capital, Kathmandu,</i> <i> raising a little boy who
was left without his father.</i> <i> The boy was just weeks old
when his father set off</i> <i> to work on Mount Everest.</i> <i> Before the climb, the father
called home one last time.</i> (SPEAKING FOREIGN LANGUAGE) (CRIES) SCOTT: So, um... And you say goodbye
to each other? Is that the last thing
he said to you, take care of your son? SCOTT:<i> But while Pacee's life
was changed forever,</i> <i>business as usual soon returned
to Mount Everest.</i> <i> Before long, a new batch
of foreign climbers arrived</i> <i> on the mountain looking
to make another run at glory</i> <i> with a little help
from the Sherpas.</i> <i> Among them, Dr. Ellen Gallant,
whose first attempt</i> <i> had been cut short
by the avalanche.</i> There was no question
I was going back. Didn't make you think twice? No. Not at all. I said,
"This can't happen again." SCOTT:<i> But then, just days
after her return to base camp...</i> The first thing I heard
was a rumble. And so, I unzipped, um, the tent
and saw a massive avalanche coming toward us. MAN: Holy shit! MAN 2: Do we need to go
in the tent? Do we need to go inside? (CLAMORING) Go, go! No! Fuck! Fuck! Fuck!
Fuck! Fuck! (RUMBLING) SCOTT:<i> The direct hit
of the avalanche left</i> <i> base camp in ruins.</i> <i> Nineteen people were dead,
including eleven more Sherpas.</i> <i> For the second year in a row,
Dr. Ellen Gallant abandoned</i> <i> her climb to try to treat
the wounded,</i> <i> but many were beyond saving.</i> What killed the majority
of people was blunt force trauma. <i> Blowing tents, blowing chairs,
blowing cook stoves,</i> <i> picking up propane tanks,
rocks...</i> These things
were just jettisoned across camp like missiles. SCOTT:<i> But the threat
of a weather disaster</i> <i> is only part of the risk
faced by Sherpas on Everest.</i> <i> They're also being endangered
by those who were supposed</i> <i> to protect them,
the expedition companies</i> <i> that employ them
and their very own government.</i> <i> The government of Nepal
charges 11,000 dollars</i> <i> in permit fees
to every foreigner looking</i> <i> to climb Mount Everest.</i> <i> That may explain why
in recent years,</i> <i> even as the number
of Sherpa deaths</i> <i> has skyrocketed,
the Nepali government</i> <i> has increased the number
of permits it's selling.</i> <i> Today, the line to the summit
of Mount Everest</i> <i> can look like a line
at Disneyworld.</i> <i>Virtually anyone willing to pay
is welcome,</i> <i> no matter how inexperienced
they may be,</i> <i> or how much of a burden
they may pose to a Sherpa.</i> -You know, I call Everest, Inc.
-Everest, Inc.? Everest, Inc.
You know, it's a cash cow. Basically, anybody can come
to this mountain. -Anyone can come
who's willing to pay?
-Yeah, who's willing to pay. SCOTT:<i> Guy Cotter</i> <i> started the very first
expedition company</i> <i> on Mount Everest back in 1992.</i> <i> Cotter says he will only take
money from experienced climbers,</i> <i> but that increasingly,
fly-by-night competitors</i> <i> will take money from novices,
meaning their Sherpas</i> <i> will have to take on
much more risk in trying</i> <i> to get these amateurs
up the mountain.</i> The entry level for people
getting onto this mountain these days is way, way too low. There are many, many people
on the mountain, you can tell as soon as
you see them, they've never climbed before. Notice you just hear people say,
"Oh, I climbed." Yeah, you climbed. Someone
has done the job for you, fixed the ladders,
fixed the ropes, dragged you up,
carried your oxygen bottles. There are so many climbers
who shouldn't be here. SCOTT:<i> Last year,
a 60-year-old Pakistani, named</i> <i> Abdul Jabbar Bhatti,
arrived at Everest.</i> <i> While he's claimed
to have climbed</i> <i>some big mountains in his past,
he was reportedly so slow</i> <i> during the start
of his Everest climb,</i> <i> that some senior Sherpas
refused to guide him.</i> <i>But a rookie Sherpa named Sange
says he wasn't given the choice.</i> (SPEAKING NEPALI) You were following orders. SCOTT:<i> Sange took Bhatti
up the mountain,</i> <i> but says he soon realized
their climb was doomed.</i> <i>He says he began to warn Bhatti
that they needed to turn around.</i> When you told your client
that he could die and take you with him,
what did he say? (SPEAKING NEPALI) Did you, at any point,
consider saving yourself and leaving him? (SPEAKING NEPALI) SCOTT:<i>
Sange and Bhatti continued
to the final leg of the climb,</i> <i> where the air is thinnest,
the temperature coldest,</i> <i> and the weather angriest.</i> <i> So, hostile is this region
to human life,</i> <i> that it's known
as the Death Zone.</i> <i> It's littered with the corpses
of dozens of climbers</i> <i> who've died there
over the years.</i> What happens to the human body
in the Death Zone? When we go into the Death Zone,
we know we are, in a sense, dying, meaning our body tissue
is being used for energy to keep us alive, and so
there's a true finite period of time that one can stay there. Oxygen pressure up there,
about a third of what there is at sea level, means that
we're just not getting air into our lungs.
Our brains stop working. It could be
incredibly confusing. People can just decide
they don't wanna move and just sit down
and... that's it. SCOTT:<i> Sange and Bhatti somehow
made it to the summit,</i> <i>but lacked the speed or strength
to make it back down,</i> <i> through the Death Zone.</i> <i> Sange says
that he and Bhatti collapsed,</i> <i> their fate seemingly sealed.</i> (SPEAKING NEPALI) SCOTT:<i> Then, a group of Sherpas
discovered the two men.</i> <i> That's Bhatti, the climber,
in yellow.</i> <i> Sange, in the blue jacket,
was nearing death,</i> <i> and seemed beyond saving.
Until...</i> I found his pulse,
very, very faint pulse, and I said no,
let's take him down. SCOTT:<i> Sherpa Ang Tshering
was leading the rescue team.</i> Were you concerned
for your own lives? We were but sometimes, I think,
you have to change the mindset, you know, like,
"I gotta do this," you know? To save someone's life. ANG TSHERING: SCOTT:<i> Ang moved quickly,
aware that parts of Sange's body</i> <i> were exposed to the cold,
including his hands.</i> When I was tying his body,
his fingers hit the bottle, -and it sounded metal to metal.
-SCOTT: Yeah. Really? Tink! You know? -SCOTT: His fingers were frozen.
-Frozen. SCOTT:<i>
But as they approached camp,
Ang saw reason for hope.</i> He moaned. There was sound
out of him, and I said,
"This guy is not going to die." I'm sitting on a rock
in front of my tent, and watching this,
and just shaking my head, thinking,
"How does this happen... again?" -Climber to doctor.
-Yep. SCOTT:<i>
Dr. Ellen Gallant was there
for her third attempt on Everest</i> <i> but for the third time,
was forced to conduct</i> <i> emergency medicine instead.</i> <i> She treated Sange and Bhatti
and saved their lives,</i> <i> much to her own surprise.</i> People just don't survive
rescues at that altitude. Nobody comes
from that condition, -out of the Death Zone, alive.
-No. <i> SCOTT:
The dangers of the Death Zone
are why, for decades,</i> <i> climbers who've died
at the top of Everest,</i> <i> have mostly been left there.
The notion of trying to recover</i> <i> their bodies was always deemed
far too dangerous.</i> <i> But now, in a brand new threat
to Sherpa safety,</i> <i> expedition companies here
are beginning to sell</i> <i> a new service, sending Sherpas
to recover corpses</i> <i> from the most harrowing part
of the mountain.</i> Risking someone's else life
to bring back a dead body, I don't think
that's a wise decision. SCOTT:<i> This was Goutam Ghosh,
a visiting climber from India,</i> <i> just before he died
in the Death Zone in 2016.</i> <i> One year later,
12 Sherpas were deployed</i> <i> to retrieve the man's corpse.</i> <i> It took four hours for them
to chip his mummified body</i> <i> out of the ice and 28 hours
for the full mission.</i> Here you are trying to recover
the body of a loved one, with the real possibility
that the person who's doing the rescue
might not make it back alive. No amount of money, for me, would be worth
that kind of risk. SCOTT:<i>
Unregulated body recoveries
from the Death Zone,</i> <i> unlimited passes
through the Khumbu icefall,</i> <i> unlimited numbers of climbers,
many without experience,</i> <i> all chasing the summit
at the same time.</i> <i> All which raises the question,
"Is anyone managing</i> <i> the world's tallest peak
or the risks to its workers?"</i> <i>We asked one of Nepal's leaders
in charge of tourism,</i> <i> Deepak Joshi.</i> How many of the climbers,
that you permit to climb, do you think are well qualified? Maybe around 50, 55 percent? -Fifty percent? Half?
-Yeah. -If half the climbers
are well-qualified,
-Mm-hmm. -and the other half are not,
-Mm-hmm. why don't you limit the mountain
to those who are? Definitely, this new policy that
we are trying to come up with, -Mm-hmm.
-will definitely address. SCOTT:<i>
But a new policy on Everest
is what the government</i> <i> has been promising
for nearly five years,</i> <i> since the string of deaths
began.</i> <i> No major policy has ever been
created.</i> SCOTT: You're in charge here.
This is your country, -your mountain, your citizens,
-Mm-hmm. who are working there. What do you think should be done to change and make more safe,
that mountain? Certainly, there are things
to improve. We are very serious of making
better-- -but if you're so serious, then,
wouldn't those tragic events have compelled to act
before now? This new policy will definitely
address these issues. SCOTT: If the government
isn't going to stop it, and the outfitters aren't going
to get together and police themselves, what's gonna happen here? More deaths. SCOTT:<i> Ang Tshering's rescue
of Sange Sherpa</i> <i> prevented yet another death,
but Sange did not escape</i> <i> the ordeal intact.</i> <i> His fingers, which froze
in the Death Zone,</i> <i> had to be amputated
due to frostbite.</i> SANGE SHERPA:
(SPEAKING NEPALI) -How are you? Good.
-Good. Doing good. SCOTT:<i> With the help
of Dr. Ellen Gallant,</i> <i> and other benefactors,
Sange is now in America,</i> <i> awaiting prosthetics
for his hands.</i> I'm very thoughtful
and very thankful for my new life. -Aww.
-Yeah. I mean, every day, I'm thinking
about you. SCOTT:<i> For her part, Dr. Gallant
did finally achieve</i> <i> her Everest dream.
After saving Sange's life,</i> <i> she pushed for the summit,
and finally made it</i> <i> to the top of the world.</i> There's no way,
I will humbly say, I, or, pretty much anybody
I've climbed with, would have stood on the summit,
without the aid of Sherpa. SCOTT:<i>
But despite her accomplishment,
she still struggles</i> <i> with the fact,
that to achieve her dream,</i> <i> a Sherpa had to risk his life.</i> I, personally,
can accept the risk, but is it acceptable for me
to put someone else at risk, meaning the Sherpa
that are helping me get to the top of the mountain.
And that's a tough one. Is it ethical to climb Everest?
That's the question. SCOTT:<i>
It's been nearly seven decades
since man first set foot</i> <i> at the top of the world,
setting in motion,</i> <i> what no one
could've foreseen at the time,</i> <i> that climbing Mount Everest,</i> <i> would become
an ever-growing enterprise,</i> <i> all built on the backs
of the Sherpas.</i> SCOTT:
What do you think your father
would make of it? Everest in 2018. You know, if he were alive
today, I don't think he would
recognize the mountain, and if anything, he might feel sorry
that he actually climbed it. Thanks for watching. Remember, you can catch
the rest of the latest edition of<i> Real Sports</i> all month long,
on HBO. ♪ (THEME MUSIC PLAYS) ♪
The one thing that always gets me is that the dead bodies lay there for decades frozen solid and end up becoming landmarks for navigation