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Ace mountaineer Malli Mastan Babu found dead in Andes Mountains

4th April, 2015 10:19am     Andhra Pradesh      Comments  

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Hyderabad:
Ace Indian mountaineer and a role model for climbers all over the world Malli Mastan Babu, who went missing since March 24 while on a climb in the Andes Mountains in Argentina, has been found dead.

Umashankar Kopalle, a native of Hyderabad, now based in Illinois, USA, who was rallying support for Babu on social media, has confirmed the latter’s death.

Facebook page called ‘Rescue Malli Mastan Babu’, which was set up by friends and well-wishers, was relentlessly covering the rescue operations but the last post seem to have given up hope. There was a heartbreaking message - "Mountains retained its favourite child. RIP Malli Mastan Babu"
 
40-year-old Babu hails from Nellore in Andhra Pradesh and has close to 10 to 12 years of experience of climbing mountain peaks.

Babu’s began his expedition on March 24th. He was attempting to climb the mountain range along the Argentina-Chile border from the base camp of Cerro Tres Cruces.

He made last contact on March 24 with Argentina’s Hernan Augusto Prajon, who was leading the rescue group now.

However, he did not return to the base camp on March 25. His friends and fellow climbers tried establishing contact with him, but his GPS device too could not be tracked.

In 2006, Babu has scaled seven summits of the world in 172 days.

Around 90 per cent of Malli Masthan Babu’s expeditions have been solo. Groups are considered safer for these expeditions, even in communities of bikers and trekkers, because the members have each other’s backs. When Mr Babu was not going solo, it meant that he was leading a group of people. He himself had admitted that scaling the Himalayas had been tough. He was even injured during the expedition.

Mr Babu carries a Garmin GPS, but he never uses it as he is well-versed with the terrains of the mountains. In fact, the rescue teams even called up the Garmin CEO for help with tracking him. But they were informed that the equipment only received and did not transmit. When Mr Babu was asked on a radio interview why he preferred to go on solo expeditions, he had said: “because it would be difficult for others to match my pace”.

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