Sherpa Climbs Everest 26th Time, Matching Record Set by Fellow Nepalese Guide

A bird flies with Mount Everest seen in the background from Namche Bajar, Solukhumbu district, Nepal, May 27, 2019. (AP)
A bird flies with Mount Everest seen in the background from Namche Bajar, Solukhumbu district, Nepal, May 27, 2019. (AP)
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Sherpa Climbs Everest 26th Time, Matching Record Set by Fellow Nepalese Guide

A bird flies with Mount Everest seen in the background from Namche Bajar, Solukhumbu district, Nepal, May 27, 2019. (AP)
A bird flies with Mount Everest seen in the background from Namche Bajar, Solukhumbu district, Nepal, May 27, 2019. (AP)

A Sherpa guide scaled Mount Everest on Sunday for the 26th time, matching the record set by a fellow Nepalese guide for the most ascents of the world’s highest peak.

Pasang Dawa Sherpa reached the summit on Sunday morning along with a Hungarian climber, according to expedition organizer Imagine Nepal Treks.

The season's first wave of climbers reached the summit this weekend as Sherpa guides fixed ropes and made paths for the hundreds of climbers who will attempt to scale the peak over the next few weeks.

Since making his first successful climb of the peak in 1998, Dawa has made the trip almost every year.

Experienced mountain guide Kami Rita earlier held the record outright for the most climbs of Mount Everest after his 26th successful trip last year. Rita is expected to attempt to climb the peak again later this month as he guides foreign climbers to the top of the world.

Climbers generally reach the base camp of the mountain in April and spend weeks acclimatizing to the high altitude, rough terrain and thin air before they go up the mountain's slopes. By the first or second week of May, they are usually making attempts for the summit.

This year's climbing was slightly delayed after three Sherpa climbers fell into a deep crevasse on a treacherous section of the mountain in April. Rescuers have not been able to find them.

With the opening of the route to the summit, a rush to make their attempts is expected in the next couple of weeks as the Nepalese authorities have issued nearly 470 permits for Everest during the popular spring climbing season.

This year also marks the 70th anniversary of the first ascent of Mount Everest in 1953 by New Zealander Edmund Hillary and his Sherpa guide Tenzing Norgay.



German Zoo Kills 12 Baboons That It Didn’t Have Enough Space to House, Despite Protests

 29 July 2025, Nuremberg: A demonstrator from Animal Rebellion is arrested by the police and the zoo's security service after entering the grounds of Nuremberg Zoo. (dpa)
29 July 2025, Nuremberg: A demonstrator from Animal Rebellion is arrested by the police and the zoo's security service after entering the grounds of Nuremberg Zoo. (dpa)
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German Zoo Kills 12 Baboons That It Didn’t Have Enough Space to House, Despite Protests

 29 July 2025, Nuremberg: A demonstrator from Animal Rebellion is arrested by the police and the zoo's security service after entering the grounds of Nuremberg Zoo. (dpa)
29 July 2025, Nuremberg: A demonstrator from Animal Rebellion is arrested by the police and the zoo's security service after entering the grounds of Nuremberg Zoo. (dpa)

A zoo in the German city of Nuremberg said it killed 12 baboons on Tuesday despite protests, capping a saga rooted in concerns that the zoo had too little space to house a growing group of the animals.

The Tiergarten Nürnberg Zoo first announced plans to kill baboons it didn't have space for in February 2024. It has said that it examined offers to take in some of the animals but was unable to make any of them work.

The plans drew criticism from animal rights groups. They also drew protests at the zoo, which said on Monday that it would have to start preparing to kill baboons. On Tuesday morning, it announced that it was closing for the day for unspecified "operational reasons.”

On Tuesday afternoon, police said several activists forced their way into the grounds, a few of them gluing themselves to the ground before being detained.

Shortly afterward, the zoo said it had killed 12 baboons, German news agency dpa reported. Further details weren’t immediately available. Animal rights groups said they planned to file a criminal complaint.

The zoo's population of Guinea baboons had grown to 43 and was too big for a house built in the late 2000s for 25 animals plus their young, leading to more conflicts among the animals.

The zoo has said it did take steps in the past to address the issue, with 16 baboons moving to zoos in Paris and China since 2011. But those zoos, and another in Spain to which baboons were previously sent, had reached their own capacity. An attempt at contraception was abandoned several years ago after failing to produce the desired results.

Animals are regularly euthanized in European zoos for a variety of reasons. Some past cases have caused an outcry; for example, one in 2014 in which Copenhagen Zoo killed a healthy 2-year-old giraffe, butchered its carcass in front of a crowd that included children and then fed it to lions.