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Double amputee climber makes history on Mount Everest
- Hari Budha Magar has become the first double above-the-knee amputee to summit the world’s tallest mountain
- The former Gurkha soldier in the British army, who lost both his legs in Afghanistan, arrived at Everest on April 17 but had to wait until May 19 to reach the summit
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A former Gurkha soldier in the British army who lost both his legs in Afghanistan has reached the top of Mount Everest, making mountaineering history.
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Hari Budha Magar, 43, has become the first double above-the-knee amputee to summit the world’s tallest mountain.
The veteran arrived at Everest in Nepal on April 17, exactly 13 years since his legs were destroyed by an IED in Afghanistan in 2010.
But he had to wait until May 19 to reach the summit and he was forced to spend 18 days waiting at the Everest base camp for the weather to clear.
While climbing up, the veteran and his crew faced freezing conditions and Budha Magar saw two dead bodies being dragged down.
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