afghanistan reopens
Transcription
afghanistan reopens
m o u n ta i n by lindsay griffin In 2010 the high hindu kush and pamir mountains of northeast afganistan wERE visited by 6 teams, 3 of them british. climb looks at why afghanistan has returned to the forefront of exploratory mountaineering. afghanistan reopens This remote area is gradually being re-visited by climbers, who report meeting nothing but kindness, respect, and incredible hospitality from the local people, in a wild region worlds apart from the on-going war with the Taliban. Peaks in the Wakhan were hugely popular in the 1960s and ‘70s, particularly amongst Europeans, who would often reach the area overland - via the ‘hippy trail’. They were enticed by generally easier access than found in other parts of the Himalaya-Karakoram, more stable weather than the Karakoram (which was closed until 1974), and the ability to climb unhampered, free from a restrictive permit system. Many notable British alpinists, such as Pete Boardman, Alex MacIntyre, Doug Scott and Stephen Venables, would make their first ‘Himalayan’ expeditions in the mountains of Afghanistan. But after the Coup d’Etat in 1978 and the Soviet invasion in December 1979, climbing in the Afghan Hindu Kush became strictly off-limits. So why Afghanistan today? The answer lies in the incredible wealth of unclimbed peaks below 6,000m and the opportunity to penetrate glaciated valleys that no climbers have previously visited. Many of these peaks can be ascended by routes of modest difficulty, making them suitable for small teams of less technically driven mountaineers, with pioneering spirits, operating in a very lightweight style. Just the sort of thing that appeals to adventurous and exploratory UK alpinists. And now there is improved access. Historically, climbers approached the area via a long drive from Kabul to the south. More or less impractical (and unwise) today, this has been replaced by a safe route from the north, starting at the international airport at Dushanbe in Tajikistan. From here a road leads south to the village of Ishkashim alongside the Amu Darya River, still better known by its ‘former’ name Oxus, which separates the former Soviet Union from Afghanistan. At Ishkashim the Aga Khan 62 ww w. c li m b m ag a z i n e . c o m MA R C H 2 0 1 1 this page, top: The Slovenian alpinist Irena Mrak at circa 6,500m on the West Ridge of Noshaq. Immediately behind her are ridges and peaks of the Aspe Safed Group, while the two higher snowy tops visible in the left middle distance are Ghul-Lasht Zom (6,665m: on the right) and Ghul-Lasht Zom East (6,611m: on the left), on the border with Pakistan. Afghanistan’s Central Hindu Kush can be seen receding into the far distance, while on the horizon the high pyramid towards the right is Koh-e-Bandaka (6,843m), well-known for its cutting edge first ascent of the North East Face in 1977 by Kurtyka, MacIntyre and Porter. FRANCOIS CARREL this page, bottom: A typical river crossing in the Wakhan Corridor. BARTEK TOFEL WWW.TOFEL.EU Development Network (AKDN) has helped finance the building of a 135m suspension footbridge over the river to... another Ishkashim (confusingly, the two villages on opposite sides of the Oxus have the same name), the gateway to the Corridor and where all arrangements for onward travel are made. David James, a former British soldier who served in Afghanistan, has set up Mountain Unity, a social enterprise to provide economic opportunities to the deprived inhabitants of the Wakhan. The non-profit organization provides marketing, media and communications support for anyone planning a climbing or trekking trip to the region. He will facilitate permits and logistics (www. mountainunity.org), in conjunction with the locally-based Wakhan Tourism. Moving east from Ishkashim into the Wakhan, the first settlement encountered is Qaz-i-Deh, mud-walled dwellings alongside the Oxus. The highest mountain in Afghanistan lies immediately south. The multi-summited Noshaq (Nine Horns, 7,492m), second only in the Hindu Kush to Tirich Mir in Pakistan, was ascended regularly until 1978. Thereafter, it would not be climbed for another 25 years. Noshaq was first climbed in 1960 by Goro Iwatsubo and Toshiaski Sakai from a Japanese expedition, which moved south up the Qazi-Deh Glacier, passed below the West Ridge, and climbed up to the crest of the long South Ridge, which forms the frontier with Pakistan. They avoided the West Summit by traversing below it to the final section of the West Ridge and followed this to the main top. Ten days later, seven Poles followed a similar line to make the second ascent. The technical ease of the West Ridge was obviously not apparent at the time, as the South Ridge is a much harder and longer enterprise. The West Ridge remained unattempted until 1963 when, independently, Gerard Gruber’s five-man expedition and Gerhard Werner’s four-man team, both from Austria, arrived at the base of the mountain and, understandably, joined forces to make the third overall ascent. From then on the West Ridge would form the Standard Route to the summit and were it not for the Afghan war, would now be one of the World’s most popular objectives for commercially-organized expeditions attempting a high but technically straightforward ascent. It was the West Ridge that the doyen of Polish mountaineering, Andrezj Zawada, chose in 1973 to make the first winter ascent of any peak over 7,000m. Despite the severe conditions, the expedition operated like a well-oiled machine and on the 13th February Tadeusz Piotrwski and Zawada stood on the summit in temperatures of -47°C; and that’s excluding wind chill. With this ascent the Poles began a total domination of winter mountaineering in the Himalaya that would span the next two decades. Alison Chadwick made the first British ascent in 1972 as a member of a Polish expedition. This page: Neil Gwynne during the first ascent of Koh-e-Khar. ALAN HALEWOOD 63 w w w.c li m b m ag a z i n e.c o m MA R C H 2 0 1 1 m o u n ta i n A B C D F E G It was the highest altitude, and highest summit, reached by a British female at that time, and Chadwick would go on to be indisputably the finest female high altitude mountaineer in the history of British climbing until her death on Annapurna I in 1978. The most outstanding contribution made by Chadwick-Onyszkiewicz (after her marriage to top Polish mountaineer Janusz Onyszkiewicz) was the 1976 first ascent of Gasherbrum III, the highest virgin summit ever climbed by any women and, after Kangchenjunga, the highest ever to receive a first British ascent. But Noshaq forms the first of a two-part saga that has firmly established Jean Bourgeois in mountaineering legend. In 1966 as part of a primarily Polish expedition, Belgian Bourgeois made the fourth overall ascent of Noshaq via the West Ridge. With two other climbers he later attempted an adjacent summit, Shingeik Zom (7,291m) by traversing across the North Face of Noshaq from the high camp on the West Ridge. On the return, after an unsuccessful effort, an avalanche caught all three. One Pole was killed and the second managed to climb back to the high camp, where he was much later rescued. Of Bourgeois there was no sign and the expedition gave him up for dead. So, there was naturally great surprise when some days later, he wandered into an almost deserted base camp to raise the alarm. Dazed after the avalanche, Bourgeois had decided to head straight down, accomplishing an extremely difficult descent on uncharted ground, eventually reaching the valley by a circuitous route. This would be remarkable in itself, but amazingly Bourgeois enacted a similar scenario 16 years later. Now 40 years old, the Belgian was part of a team of French and Swiss superstars who had a permit to attempt a winter ascent of the West Ridge of Everest from Nepal but in fact made an illegal attempt on the North Col - North Ridge (at that time the Tibetan side of Everest was off-limits to climbers). On the 27th December 1982 he was attempting to cross back over the frontier ridge to the Nepalese base camp, alone and with increasing symptoms of cerebral odema, when he fell, landing on the Upper Rongbuk Glacier on the Tibetan side of the mountain. Slightly concussed, not having the strength to climb back up, and realizing his condition dictated loosing height fairly rapidly was a must, he elected to descend to the ruined Rongbuk Monastery and then on to the first village, where the Tibetans initially mistook him for a Yeti, before giving him food and drink. There was more walking before he was eventually taken to Shigatse, interrogated and then driven to the border. After trekking down washed-out roads, he managed to find a bus to Kathmandu, arriving ‘from the dead’ more than two weeks after the accident. In the meantime his fellow team members had searched for six days before giving up hope, abandoning the expedition, and returning to the Nepalese capital. The first mountaineering team to gain official permission to visit the Wakhan after the Soviet invasion took place in 2003. Italian Carlo Alberto Pinelli, Director of Mountain Wilderness International, brought his expedition, dubbed Oxus, Mountains for Peace in Afghanistan, to the Corridor specifically to climb Noshaq. He followed the previously well-travelled route from Kabul, through Badakhshan, and then along the river valley to Ishkashim, passing on route many old Soviet war relics from the time of occupation. On reaching Qaz-i-Deh the group managed to hire porters without problem, some of the people from this village, now of around 1,000 inhabitants, remembering names of climbers from ‘1960s-’70s expeditions. However, immediate onward progress was brought to a sudden halt with the unexpected news that lower part of the valley was mined. 64 ww w. c li m b m ag a z i n e . c o m MA R C H 2 0 1 1 Tajikistan PKM LC BP S OR KAS LP China KI QH HHK Ish N Pakistan In 2000 Northern Alliance leader General Massoud ordered the planting of 640 anti-personnel mines at circa 3,000m south of the village, covering an area of traditionally-used grazing pastures. At that stage in the civil war it was believed the Taliban might use the Qaz-i-Deh Valley to cross from Pakistan to Badakhshan (which they were doing via other more accessible passes), though this seems a highly implausible given the mountaineering skills needed to cross the high snow/ice pass at its southern head. Fortunately, the commander in charge of laying these mines was still in the northeast of Afghanistan and could be contacted. With several local men the expedition created a new approach that outflanked the mines by climbing high up and then across scree-covered slopes on the east flank of the valley. To date, these mines, the only fields in the Wakhan, have not been removed. The main high altitude experience in Pinelli’s international team was the Italian Fausto di Stefani, who that spring had been attempting Lhotse in his bid to complete all 14 8,000m peaks. He acclimatized much faster than anyone else and reached the summit alone in late July. Old fixed ropes were still visible on the rotten rocky barrier at circa 6,800m that marks the only real point of the route that is not steep snow plodding. Three other team members subsequently followed his footsteps. Since then there have been several ascents. Two Iranians reached the top in 2007 and two years later, after undergoing a training program in Chamonix, two Afghans from Wakhan, Amruddin and Malang, summited with French guides Jean Annequin and Simon Destombes. In 2010 there were two successful expeditions. On the first North Wales climbers James Bingham and Mark Wynne joined Alaskan Bill this page, top left: Looking south east at (A) Noshaq Main Summit (7,492m: Japanese, 1960). (B) Noshaq Central (7,400m: Japanese, 1960). (C) Noshaq West (7,250m: Austrian, 1963). (D) Noshaq Far West Shoulder (c6,900m: Austrians, 1963). The broad West Ridge points directly towards the camera. (E) Asp-eSiyah (6,250m: Japanese, 1960). (F) The Asp-e-Safed Group: I (6,607m: Poles, 1960); II (6,400m: Austrians, 1969); III (6,380m: Austrians, 1970); IV (6,140m: Germans, 1972). (G) Asp-e-Safed South (6,450m Spanish 1969). The far right edge of the picture is the start of the Tirich Mir Group in Pakistan. LINDSAY GRIFFIN page top right: East face of Peak 5,625m. (1) Ursa Major and (2) White Surf. Both routes were terminated on the ridge just below the summit. TOMEK KLIMCZAKB/BARTEK TOFEL WWW.TOFEL.EU this page, BOTTOM right: Afghanistan’s Wakhan Corridor, surrounded by Tajikistan, Pakistan and China. (Ish) Ishkashim. (OR) Oxus River. (PKM) Pik Karl Marx (6,723m) in Tajik South West Pamir. (N) Noshaq. (HHK) High Hindu Kush. (QH) Qala-i-Hurst. (S) Roadhead at -e-Boroghil, south of which lies Koh-eSuzAnna. (BP) Big Pamir. (LP) Little Pamir. (LC) Lake Chaqmaqtin (4,000m), reached by Madge and Torretta. (KAS) Koh-e-Ak Su, the sector of the Little Pamir explored by the Poles. (KI) Koh-i-Iskander. Google maps WI £2, N 00 0 OF FA EX JAGG PE ED PLY DIT G V OR I CA SIT J ION LO AG LL BE * GE 0 R SIM Lyden for an ascent in July. Wynne, a heavy weapons specialist and Royal Marines reservist who in 2008-09 served a term in Helmand with UN forces, had little previous altitude experience, though Bingham, on the other hand, summited Everest in 2007. This was the first British ascent of the main summit since 1974, but the team was only allowed to approach the mountain provided they were accompanied by four armed guards. A month after, Noshaq was climbed again by six Iranians. All parties followed the West Ridge. The majority of climbing in 2010, took place on peaks of relatively modest altitude. British ski-mountaineer Suzy Madge and World Cup Ice Climbing Champion, Anna Torretta from Italy made a long horse journey east along the Wakhan, leaving behind the Hindu Kush, where on route they had made the first ascent and ski descent of Koh-e-SuzAnna (4,660m), to enter the mountains of the Pamir-i-Wakhan. Here, in the Little Pamir, they made two more first ascents of 4,760m and 4,800m. Scottish mountaineers Neil Gwynne and Alan Halewood also climbed in the Pamir, making first ascents of Koh-e-Iskander (5,561m) and Koh-eKhar (5,327m), inspired by a simple Japanese map that Halewood had bought in a Glasgow climbing shop 20 years ago. A small Dutch team made three first ascents up to AD standard in the Qala-i-Hurst, a valley with fine alpine peaks towards the eastern end of the Hindu Kush that has been partially explored by Italian and British parties in the last few years. However, the most productive expedition was Bartek Tofel’s 14-member Polish team (half of which drove to the Wakhan from Poland), which made a total of eight first ascents up to 5,735m (and attempted several others) in a previously unexplored valley of the Little Pamir. In 2009 Tofel travelled the entire length of the Wakhan to the triple border point of Afghanistan, Tajikistan and China, exploring the region and photographing mountains for future expeditions. This eastern sector of the Wakhan Corridor still has enormous potential for first ascents. During the climbing boom of the 1960s and 70s it was too remote, and access too difficult, to capture attention, particularly with much higher, virgin peaks available near the entrance to the Corridor, just a few hours’ drive from Ishkashim. Tofel estimates there are probably around 600 peaks that have never been attempted. n EG 845 D-G I 20 STER 345 LOB 11 B 8 E F RO OR 848 A .CO.U QU CH OU OT R ND K ER U R EF E : C0 311 NEW FOR 2011 EXPEDITIONS TO THE MAKALU REGION This page: Suzy Madge (left) and Anna Torretta near Sarad-e-Boroghil. Behind and to the south is Koh-e-SuzAnna. SUZY MADGE *Visit our website for full terms and conditions. Closing date 31 March 2011