New Delhi: Arunima
Sinha lost her one leg after she was thrown out of a moving train.
Nearly two years after the tragedy struck, she is preparing to
conquer Mount Everest - the world's highest peak at 8,848 metres
above sea level.
"When I was undergoing treatment at AIIMS (All India Institute of
Medical Sciences) for four months, I could not do anything on my
own. But then one day I decided to climb the Everest," Sinha told
reporters here Monday.
If successful, Sinha would become the first differently-abled
Indian woman to achieve the feat, which she plans to attempt with
an artificial limb.
A 61-year-old American woman Rhonda Graham, a left-leg amputee,
climbed Mount Everest in October 2011.
Sinha, 26, starts her expedition April 1 with Susen Mahto, a
mountaineer from Jharkhand, with whom she successfully scaled the
6,622-metre Mount Chhamser Kangri in Ladakh in 2012.
Both have been trained by Bachendri Pal, the first Indian woman to
climb Mount Everest.
Pal, who is also the chief of Tata Steel Adventure Foundation,
said: "A year and a half ago, Arunima called me and expressed her
desire to climb Everest. I could not believe that she wanted to do
it without one leg."
Sinha lost her leg in 2011 after she was thrown out of a moving
train for resisting a robbery attempt.
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