Was Ali Sadpara killed or a tragedy unfolded? Important facts unveiled by senior Pakistani journalist

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Lahore: Was Ali Sadpara killed or a victim of a tragedy? In this regard, senior journalist Mubasher Lucman has talked in great detail, he says that any climber needs fifty thousand dollars to climb his dream mountain, i.e. up to eight million rupees and yet he does not do it at the same time. Not only is he fighting for the Summit but he is also fighting for his life. The moral crisis that has been demonstrated on social media on the issue of Ali Sadpara is a source of shame for us.

Mubasher Lucman says that unfortunately as a nation, we have suffered such a moral decline that we do not miss any opportunity. When Ramadan comes, we stockpile by raising prices and if there is a national tragedy and the people are trying to find out the truth, then we immediately set up a shop of lies. Even on the most sensitive of occasions, we do not shy away from exploiting things. And if you ask anyone what are the reasons for our decline, why is Pakistan not developing? So all the rubble of blame will either be thrown on the rulers, or some other reason will be taken out, but no one will take the blame for themselves.

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Mubasher Lucman says that in the case of Muhammad Ali Sadpara, all records were broken, every day a new conspiracy theory was drawn up just to get more views. Sometimes the death of Sadpara was declared a murder, sometimes it was a conspiracy of Nepali climbers and one by one the so-called analysts had piled up their own fabricated evidence to prove their point.

Mubasher Lucman says that this is the reason that while the people still want to know the truth about Ali Sadpara, the family of Ali Sadpara is still trying to cover up the false news about him. There is no doubt that only they know what happened to Ali Sadpara, John Snorri and JP Mohar. Attempts are being made to reach some conclusion by linking the statements and information of the climber and Sajid Sadpara present there.

Mubasher Lucman says that in today’s video we will help you to reach a logical conclusion in the light of all this information. However, Sajid Sadpara has unveiled some new things that will also be highlighted. Our team is in touch with Sajid Sadpara and we are trying to get Sajid Sadpara to answer the questions you want to hear about. Sajid Sadpara set the record as the youngest person for the first time in 2019 by covering the K2 head with his father.

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Mubasher Lucman says that this winter, 22-year-old Sajid was going to make a record of covering K2 head again in winter with his father Ali Sadpara but, circumstances did not give him a chance and he had to leave his father and return from an altitude of 8,200 meters. When Sajid returned, he not only had to deal with his grief but also with his family. He also had to stop negative propaganda in the media. On the one hand, respect, public acceptance and on the other hand, the media was anxious to hear his story, while technical details were being misinterpreted from fake accounts and many serious mistakes were being made including highlighting the wrong time, wrong place, wrong altitude and so on.

Mubasher Lucman says that for example, a well-known organization like BBC wrote that despite Sajid Sadpara’s ill health, Ali Sadpara wanted to take him to the top, but Sajid Sadpara did not go. However, according to Sajid Sadpara, this is the opposite and his father had asked him to go back.

Mubasher Lucman says that on January 15, John Snorri and Ali Sadpara had their second day in Camp Two, they had planned to go up to Camp Three but, along with a good weather, there was also a strong wind forecast. Which discouraged them from going up. They sent Sajid to Camp 3 to collect some supplies. When Sajid reached an altitude of 7,000 meters at Lower Camp 3, he met Sergi Mingote and JP Mohr.

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Mubasher Lucman says, Sergi Mingote asked Sajid if you guys are going to Summit with Nepali team? They are leaving tomorrow morning. John Snorri and Ali Sadpara didn’t know anything about the Nepali team, and they found out when Sajid reached Camp Two below where they were waiting for him under the Black Pyramid and that place was too far for them to join.

Mubasher Lucman says that Sergi Mingote, who was at Japanese Camp 3 on the same day, wrote in his post that two strong teams Nirmal Purja’s and Mingma G’s are up one camp and will try to make a head start tomorrow morning after forecasting good weather. In this post, he also mentioned meeting Sajid. Joe was taking John Snorri’s gear to Camp Three. At the end of this post, he wished all the best to both the teams and after that no post of Sergi Mingote came because he had an accident on his way back on January 16th.

Mubasher Lucman says that at the beginning of February, about forty people arrived for the summit because a short weather window was predicted on February 5. Chances of completing the summit were slim, so many people left Camp One, while about 20 people (some climbers say the number is twenty-five), reached at Camp Three on February 4 from 3pm to 8pm. Colin O’Brady arrived first followed by JP Moher. He also had a small two-person tent. Ali Sadpara also had a tent in which John Snorri and Sajid Sadpara were to stay. However, another Sherpa had only one more tent.

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Mubasher Lucman says that John Snorri and Ali Sadpara had to share their tent with three other people due to which they were not able to lie down in this small tent nor change their socks. They were not able to melt ice for food or water and they couldn’t rest for their final push, even though it was too late for him to get out as planned.

Mubasher Lucman says that according to Sajid Sadpara and Rao Ahmed, the slowest in the team was John Snorri. While he left at half past eleven at night, Ali was always moving fast on the mountain. He left at two in the morning. Both were using supplemental oxygen, and both had two bottles. Sajid left his father two hours ago at night. He was not using oxygen. He wanted to set a record for the youngest climber to climb K2 in the winter without oxygen. Even the youngest climber, Gelje Sherpa, who climbed K2 in the winter, is five years older than Sajid.

Mubasher Lucman says that Sajid had two oxygen bottles, one for himself in case of emergency and the other for John Snorri. On the way, Sajid met Slovenian climber Tomaz Rotar, who had been working with John Snorri on ropes but he got out of the way because, according to him, it was not possible for him to cross the two and a half meter wide Crevasse at an altitude of seven thousand eight hundred meters. Ali Sadpara also found Sajid on the bank of Crevasse and JP Mohar and John Sunori were also there. According to Sajid, it was very scary and scary. They crossed it together and did not tie or use ropes for it.

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Mubasher Lucman says that this is the most confusing part of the story. According to Sajid, all three of them knew about this Crevasse because he was told by Nepalese climber Mingma G after his summit that after failing to cross it, he almost again came to Camp Three and took another route and the route he found was a very steep ramp after Crevasse. Mingma G also said that there is no rope from two hundred and fifty to three hundred meters of Camp Three and then it starts which goes up to the top.

Mubasher Lucman says that according to Sajid, most of his information, which is at an altitude of 8,200 meters and at ten o’clock in the morning, casts doubt that it may not have been a dream. He was watching his father start traversing the top of the bottleneck and looking back at him. Where Sajid left his father, a rope had started in the bottleneck area. When he returned to Camp Three after the oxygen crash, it was 4 or 5 in the evening and on his way back he crossed Crevasse and with great difficulty reached only one foot of the shore. He doesn’t even know why it took him so long to get to Camp Three. While the storm had started at 7 pm, at 11 pm Sajid again went to see the headlamps of his father and other colleagues but he did not see anything.

Mubasher Lucman says that according to Sajid, he does not think that he has fallen ill because he was looking brighter and better. There must have been an accident with them. It takes five hours to get to the top from the start of the Bottleneck, so they should have reached the top of K2 at three in the afternoon. It was agreed that he would call when he reached the top, but he did not come nor did he get any track or SMS. A few questions that are very important and because of this way we can come to an important conclusion that while K2 is 8611 meters high, Sajid returned from 8200 meters at ten o’clock in the morning and reached Camp Three just two hours before the storm. In six hours – was there a mistake in calculating this storm? Because if Ali Sadpara had to reach the peak at three o’clock in the afternoon, could he have reached Camp Three in the next three hours?

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Mubasher Lucman says there is a rumor that Nepali climbers cut the ropes so that no one else could climb the peak. The question arises, when two camps at Camp III were lost in the snow due to stormy winds and extreme cold, which led to a shortage of tents, weren’t the ropes likely to be covered in snow as well?

John Sunori also returned last year without a head start in the winter. This year he did not want to fail again. Nepali climbers came after him and left after completing their goal. Wasn’t it a bad decision in these circumstances to ignore the threats for John Snorri and Ali Sadpara?

Mubasher Lucman says that according to many people, the gathering of 40 people at the K2 Summit turned it into a circus, which made it very difficult for professional climbers and at one point twenty people arrived at Camp Four and didn’t even get a chance to relax. Is this also a cause of the Ali Sadpara tragedy? Six climbers gave their lives this season. Three of them went up and three came back, leaving the campaign unfinished. So could their lives have been saved by not taking risks?

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Mubasher Lucman says that mountain climbing is a life threatening task and every climber knows that there is a high probability of his death. But success is not possible without risk. If Ali Sadpara had not taken this risk, would he have been able to climb eight out of fourteen? It’s time to think about it.

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