Claims by Dinesh and Tarakeshwari Rathod to have climbed world’s highest peak were verified by authorities but later doubted

This article is more than 4 years old

This article is more than 4 years old

An Indian couple have been banned from climbing Nepalese mountains for 10 years after authorities determined that their claimed ascent of Mount Everest this year was faked.

Dinesh Rathod and his wife, Tarakeshwari, both police officers, were hailed as the first Indian couple to climb the world’s highest peak on 23 May.

The couple’s claim, initially verified by Nepalese authorities, was based on photographs they supposedly had taken at the peak.

But in June complaints were lodged by several other mountaineers including Satyarup Siddhanta, a climber from West Bengal, who said the couple had used doctored versions of photographs from his successful ascent two days earlier.

Indian couple accused of faking photo of summit at Mount Everest Read more

On Tuesday Nepalese tourism officials said an investigation had determined the Rathods never reached the 8,850-metre peak.

“Our investigation shows that the couple faked their summit. We have imposed a 10-year ban against them from climbing any mountain in Nepal,” Sudarshan Prasad Dhakal, the tourism department chief, told Agence France-Presse.

The police commissioner in Pune, where the two officers are based, said their fraud was “indeed shocking”. Rashmi Shukla said the couple had “tarnished the image not only of police force but of the whole country.”

Shukla said the two 30-year-olds had disappeared after being interviewed and were still missing. “The two have disappeared without a trace even as we were conducting the inquiry,” she told the Indian Express.

Neither of the pair co-operated with the investigation, and the two sherpas tasked with accompanying them to the summit have also absconded, according to Nepalese authorities.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Dinesh Rathod and his wife Tarakeshwari on Mount Everest in a photo claimed to be faked. Photograph: Facebook

Nepalese media reported in July that 15 of 32 government-appointed liaison officers, who are tasked with supervising successful Everest climbs, had verified climbers’ claims without even visiting the mountain’s south-side base camp.

The officers are supposed to accompany climbers who reach the summit to the camp and then await their return, deciding whether to recommend them for a verification certificate.

Of the remaining 17 officers who did reach base camp, the report said, six returned the same day and five stayed for only a handful of days. A spokesman for Nepal’s tourism department told the Guardian the report was “baseless”.

Another climber who lodged a complaint against the Rashods, Anjali Kulkarni, said the pair’s attempts a doctoring the photographs had been amateurish, showing them in varying outfits in different photos from the summit. “Being able to change one’s clothes mid-climb and not get frostbitten would be a miracle,” he told a Mumbai newspaper.

The complaint also reportedly alleged the couple had been previously denied a verification certificate by Australian authorities, for their claim to have scaled Australia’s 10 highest peaks in November 2014.

About 450 people scaled Everest during the March to May climbing season this year, after two consecutive years of disasters on the mountain during which almost all attempts were abandoned.

