A climber moved with an altitude disease from near the top of Japan Mount Fuji Last week he returned to the slope and was rescued for the second time only four days later, authorities said Monday.
The climber was identified only as a 27 -year -old Chinese student who lives in Japan. He made an emergency call on April 22 and was transferred by air after developing symptoms or altitude disease, police said, added that escalation suspens were also damaged.
On Saturday, he returned to the Fujinomiya path of the mountain to almost 10,000 feet above sea level to search for his cell phone and another belief behind, said the Shizuoka prefecture police. Another climber found him there unable to move after he apparently became ill, the police said.
“I was suspended from having an altitude disease and it was hospital tasks,” a police spokesman in the Shizuoka region to the France-Presse agency on Monday said Monday.
It was not known if in the end he could find his phone, local media reported.
Toru Hanai/Reuters
The mountain hiking trails are official official only from July at the beginning of September, but there is no penalty for walking out of season. There is also no charge or penalty when a climber needs to be rescued, but the case of the Chinese student caused a surf on social networks and generated the calls to accuse him, at least for his second rescue.
After the rescue of man, the police in the prefecture of Shizuoka reiterated his advice against the climbing of the mountain the low season, since the weather could suddenly change, which makes it difficult for rescuers to respond, the BBC reported. The medical facilities along the paths are also closed.
Police urged all climbers to use caution, noting that the mountain has low temperatures and is covered with snow even in spring.
The mountain of 3,776 meters high (12,388 feet) was designated as a Unesco cultural heritage site in 2013. A symbol of Japan, the mountain called “Fujisan” used to be a place of pilgrimage and today they are increasingly popular hikers.
To control the overcrowding and risks of climbing during the night through the rocky slopes to see dawn, the local authorities last year introduced an entry rate and a limit on the number of participants in the most practical Simararss of Maot.
But exactly how many tourists visit Fuji, and how many are too many, is in debate, Thomas Jones, professor of sustainability and tourism at the Ritsumeikan University of Japan, He told CBS News in 2023.
“I would have to find consensus” for what constitutes the load capacity, he said, “and at this time there is none of that. So, in reality there is no child or a concerted effort the number of visitors there.”
In 2023, more than 220,000 people went up to Mount Fuji between July and September, according to the BBC.
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