Swiss perspectives in 10 languages

First Swiss woman on Everest deplores ‘tragedy’ on K2

the k2 mountain, a big mountain covered in snow
The K2: at 8,611 the second-highest mountain in the world. Keystone / Ho

The death of a Pakistani porter on the world's second highest mountain at the end of July “could and should have been prevented”, Swiss mountaineer Evelyne Binsack has told newspaper Blick.

Binsack was commentingExternal link on the death of Muhammad Hassan, a Pakistani man employed as a porter who died after an accident last month on the second highest mountain in the world.

Reports suggest that while Hassan lay alive on the ground, many other climbers simply passed around him on their ascent.

“On the mountain, tourists become animals,” Binsack told Blick. “There is no reason for somebody to die”.

+ Read more: why the point of climbing is not the summit

The problem is societal, she says: more and more people who think only of their ego and their bucket list are heading to the world’s highest peaks, which have become a “tourism Eldorado”.

Many tourists pay huge sums of money to be flown into base camps before they climb to the summit with the help of Sherpas and porters like Hassan – without whose support most of them wouldn’t get far, Binsack said.

The Swiss mountaineer, who has reached the summit of Mount Everest three times, says the “decaying values” in the climbing world are one reason she is no longer interested in taking on any more “eight-thousandersExternal link”.

+ Meet the grand old man of Swiss alpinism

The exact circumstances of Hassan’s death are still unclear. Regional authorities in Pakistan have since opened an investigation into the death, according to Swiss public broadcaster, SRF.

News

Two Rothornbahn gondolas cross each other on Lenzerheide on Friday, April 3, 2009.

More

Swiss cable car activity rose in winter 2023-2024

This content was published on In the winter season up to April 2024, railway and cable car operators ferried 3% more visitors compared to the previous winter, and 5% more than the five-year average.

Read more: Swiss cable car activity rose in winter 2023-2024
flooding Rhine

More

Rhine flooding: Swiss to invest CHF1 billion with Austria

This content was published on As part of an international agreement with Austria, the Swiss government wants to pump CHF1 billion ($1.1 billion) into flood protection measures along the Rhine over the next three decades.

Read more: Rhine flooding: Swiss to invest CHF1 billion with Austria

In compliance with the JTI standards

More: SWI swissinfo.ch certified by the Journalism Trust Initiative

You can find an overview of ongoing debates with our journalists here . Please join us!

If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.

SWI swissinfo.ch - a branch of Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR

SWI swissinfo.ch - a branch of Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR