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Veteran becomes first double above-knee amputee to summit highest peaks of all seven continents
Summary
British Army veteran Hari Budha Magar reached the 4,892-metre summit of Mount Vinson in Antarctica to complete the Seven Summits, becoming the first double above‑knee amputee to do so. He lost both legs in 2010 while serving with the Gurkha regiment and has used the challenge to raise disability awareness and funds for veterans' charities.
Content
Hari Budha Magar reached the 4,892-metre (16,050 ft) summit of Mount Vinson in Antarctica on Tuesday, completing the highest peaks of all seven continents. He is reported as the first double above-knee amputee to finish the Seven Summits. Magar lost both legs in 2010 to an IED while serving with the British Army's Gurkha regiment, and he has spoken about severe mental health struggles that followed. He was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire last year for services to disability awareness.
Key facts:
- Reached Mount Vinson (4,892 metres) in Antarctica to complete the Seven Summits.
- Reported as the first double above-knee amputee to summit the highest peak on each continent.
- Lost both legs in 2010 to an IED while serving with the British Army's Gurkha regiment.
- Has spoken publicly about PTSD, suicidal thoughts and addiction after his injury.
- Helped overturn a Nepali ban on climbers with disabilities after first applying to climb Everest in 2018, and raised funds for veterans' charities including The Gurkha Welfare Trust, Blesma, Team Forces, On Course Foundation and Pilgrim Bandits.
Summary:
Magar's completion of the Seven Summits is presented as a milestone for disability awareness and for fundraising for veterans' charities. Undetermined at this time.
