Muhammad Ali Sadpara (Urdu: محمد علی سدپارہ; 2 February 1976 – February 2021)[2] was a Pakistani high-elevation mountain dweller. He was important for the group (which included Italian alpinist Simone Moro) that effectively finished the principal winter rising to the highest point of Nanga Parbat in 2016.[3] Sadpara effectively climbed an aggregate of eight-thousanders all through his profession, four of which he had rose in a solitary schedule year.[4]
Muhammad Ali Sadpara
محمد علی سدپارہ
Muhammad Ali Sadpara.jpg



Sadpara in 2019
Conceived
2 February 1976
Skardu, Gilgit−Baltistan, Pakistan
Vanished
5 February 2021 (matured 45)
K2, Pakistan
Status
Missing for a very long time and 6 days
(authoritatively assumed dead at K2 Bottleneck on 18 February 2021)
Body found
July 26, 2021[1]
Resting place
K2 Mountain
Occupation
Mountain climber
Spouse(s)
Fatima Sadpara
Youngsters
3
Sadpara, alongside his 21-year-old child, Sajid (who had likewise ascended K2 in 2019), collaborated with Icelandic mountain dweller John Snorri Sigurjónsson[5] and Chilean mountain climber Juan Pablo Mohr Prieto[6] for a joint-rising of K2, and left the most noteworthy camp on the evening of 4 February 2021. Sajid was subsequently compelled to dive due an oxygen controller malfunction,[7] leaving different individuals from the group at the K2 Bottleneck, near the highest point. Sadpara, Sigurjónsson and Prieto proceeded with their climb to K2’s highest point, yet didn’t return around evening time as arranged, and were pronounced missing on 5 February 2021.[8][9] A salvage mission with two Pakistan Army helicopters was coordinated on 6 February 2021 to look for the team.[10][11][12]
On 18 February 2021, Pakistani specialists reported that the three men were formally assumed dead, yet the quest for their remaining parts would continue.[13][14] Sadpara’s family likewise proclaimed him as probably dead on the equivalent day.[15][16] On 26 July 2021, three bodies accepted to be of the missing mountain dwellers were found on the inclines above Camp 4.[17][18] Sadpara’s body was found around 300 meters (980 ft) underneath K2’s Bottleneck.[19] The bodies were found by a Madison Mountaineering Sherpa Team fixing ropes above Camp 4.[20]
Early life
Sadpara was brought into the world on 2 February 1976 in the town of Sadpara, situated close to Skardu in Gilgit−Baltistan, Pakistan.[21][22]He was the most youthful of eleven youngsters, and eight of his kin didn’t endure adolescence. He wedded his better half, Fatima, when he was 19 and had his first child, Sajid, right away subsequently; he had an aggregate of three children.[23] He finished his FA from an administration school in Skardu[24] and was an individual from his school football team.[25] He started his profession as a high-elevation watchman, filling in as a collaborator in hiking expeditions.[26] Like most different doormen, Sadpara crossed the tough Baltoro Glacier in back-peddles and castoff gear.[27]
Mountaineering experience
Sadpara on the highest point of K2 in August 2018
Sadpara had effectively climbed eight of the 14 eight-thousanders on Earth. His first trip was Gasherbrum II, situated in the Karakoram range.
Rundown of fruitful mountaineering climbs
Mountain Name Range Country Year of Ascent Notes
Gasherbrum II Karakoram Pakistan/China 2006 First rising
Brilliant Peak Karakoram Pakistan 2006
Nanga Parbat Himalayas Pakistan 2008
Muztagh Ata Pamir China 2008
Nanga Parbat Himalayas Pakistan 2009
Gasherbrum I Karakoram Pakistan/China 2010
Nanga Parbat Himalayas Pakistan 2016 First winter climb
Expansive Peak Karakoram Pakistan/China 2017
Nanga Parbat Himalayas Pakistan 2017 First pre-winter rising
Pumori Himalayas Nepal/China 2017 First winter climb
K2 Karakoram Pakistan/China 2018
Lhotse Himalayas Nepal/China 2019
Makalu Himalayas Nepal/China 2019
Manaslu Himalayas Nepal 2019
In 2015, Sadpara’s group endeavored to scale Nanga Parbat during wintertime and were ineffective; the group endeavored another colder time of year rising in 2016 and effectively summited its pinnacle, bringing about the very first winter climb of the mountain. Sadpara had effectively rose Nanga Parbat multiple times in his mountaineering profession. In January 2018, Sadpara collaborated with Alex Txikon [es],[28] a Basque mountain dweller, and ineffectively endeavored to culmination Mount Everest in Nepal during winter with no supplemental oxygen.[26][29][30]
In June 2018, he was enrolled by French speed climber Marc Batard [fr][31] to embrace a five-year program known as “Past Mount Everest”. They wanted to highest point Nanga Parbat, K2 and Mount Everest in 2019, 2021, and 2022, respectively.[32]
Tributes
Ali Sadpara Climbing Wall at Qayyum Stadium, Peshawar.[33]
6U.S. based NGO Paani Project fabricated a well to pay tribute to Sadpara
No comments:
Post a Comment