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Briton makes record Everest climb by foreigner, two die on mountain

Hiking officials reported that two Indian climbers had died on the mountain this season, bringing the total to five.

Kenton Cool, 52, had climbed to the summit of 8,849 metres (29,032 feet) before dawn, and was now descending towards lower camps. His expedition organizers predicted that he would reach base camp by the weekend.

Nivesh?Karki, the organiser of their expedition Pioneer?Adventure, confirmed that an Indian climber had died at Camp II while another was killed at Hillary Step. He said that both had reached the summit of Mount Everest on Thursday, but they died on their descent.

The "death zones" is the area below the summit of Mount Everest, and it's where Hillary Step is. It's called this because the oxygen levels are dangerously low.

The details of their death were not disclosed.

Karki said, "one body is at a very high altitude. We are trying to bring the second corpse from camp II."

Cool, the British 'climber is "quietly" rewriting record books,?said Lukas Furtenbach, four-time Everest organiser and climber of the Austrian-based Furtenbach Adventures.

"More Everest summits that any non-Sherpa has ever achieved... and yet, they still make it seem like a walk in the mountains. Furtenbach said from base camp, "absolute legend." Cool climbed on one of Furtenbach’s teams.

Cool, who has climbed Everest every year since 2004, except for the years that authorities have closed the mountain because of various reasons, says it is not a routine thing to do.

It never gets easier or less frightening. Cool stated that the?mountain is the tallest in the world, and it brings with it an incredible feeling of majesty.

"I'm relying on every bit of experience that I have to be able to move safely around this environment." "Standing on the summit of the mountain for the 20th time is an incredibly special experience."

Kami Rita is a 32-year-old?Nepali sherpa who holds the record for most summits at Everest.

Since 1953, when Sir Edmund Hillary of New Zealand and Sherpa, Tenzing Norgay, first climbed Everest, more than 8,500 people have climbed it, some multiple times. Reporting by Gopal sharma; editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan

(source: Reuters)