At 80, Japanese man becomes oldest to climb Mount Everest
The Japanese octogenarian claimed the title previously held by Nepali Min Bahadur Sherchan as the oldest to climb the mountain in November 2009, reported Xinhua.
- Indo-Asian News Service
- Updated: May 23, 2013 01:41 pm IST
Eighty year-old Japanese Yuichiro Miura on Thursday, became the world's oldest person to reach the summit of Mount Everest.
"He climbed the world's highest mountain at 9.15 a.m. this morning securing a new title," said Gyanendra Shrestha, an official at mountaineering department of Nepal's ministry of tourism and civil aviation.
The Japanese octogenarian claimed the title previously held by Nepali Min Bahadur Sherchan as the oldest to climb the mountain in November 2009, reported Xinhua.
Earlier, Sherchan had replaced Miura in the Guinness World Records. Miura first climbed the peak in 2003 at the age of 70. He did it again in May 2008 when he was 75, but failed to set a record as he reached the summit a day after Sherchan achieved the same feat at age 76.
After Miura announced he would climb the Everest, Sherchan, who is now 82 years old, also intends to do so in the current climbing season.
"Sherchan is still in the Mt. Everest base camp is and preparing to climb," Shrestha told Xinhua.