MUHAMMAD ALI SADPARA
“Mountains request enthusiasm. Aap ki dillagi sharpen chahiyee paharoon kay saath [your heart should be enamored with the mountains],” a radiating Muhammad Ali Sadpara had said in 2016 when I asked the stuff to turn into a mountain climber.
A “cheerful, great individual”, Sadpara is regularly portrayed by his companions as a hard core climber with an agreeable nature. The simply Pakistani to have climbed eight of the 14 8,000 meter tops, Sadpara came to noticeable quality in neighborhood media when he, alongside Spain’s Alex Txikon and Italy’s Simone Moro, made a world record with the main winter culmination of Nanga Parbat in 2016. The Spaniard and the Italian said their culmination would not have been conceivable without Sadpara, an awakening underwriting for a man generally stowed away from the public eye in Pakistan.
Pakistan is home to five 8,000m pinnacles including K2, Nanga Parbat, Broad Peak, Gasherbrum I and II. The leftover are in Nepal and China.
Brought into the world on February 2, 1976, the normally gifted and humble climber hails from a town called Sadpara, close to Skardu in the Gilgit-Baltistan locale.