A Filipino has reached the summit of the world’s highest mountain—and he wasn’t the one many expected would do it first.
Heracleo "Leo" Oracion made it to the top of the 8,848-meter (29,035-foot) Mount Everest at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday in Nepal (5:30 p.m. in Manila), ending the suspense of a tropical nation riveted by the stories of a handful of its countrymen conquering the peak.
"The Philippine eagle has landed at the summit of Everest," Art Valdez, leader of the First Philippine Mount Everest Expedition, quoted Oracion as saying through satellite radio, in a press conference in Makati City.
Exec. Secretary Eduardo Ermita congratulated Oracion. "The indomitable spirit of man, especially if that men are Pinoys, [shows that] we are equal to anyone in the world; therefore we all rejoice that they have accomplished this feat," Ermita said at a press briefing.
Valdez said Oracion, the Everest team’s lead climber, had only one sherpa guide with him on the way up Everest. He said Oracion, a 35-year-old native of Lucban, Quezon, reached the Hillary stretch of the mountain, which is 1,000 meters from the peak, at 12:30 p.m.
On the way down
Oracion was already on his way down from the mountain, hoping to help his regular climbing partner, Erwin "Pastor" Emata, reach the summit too, added Valdez, the former transportation undersecretary.
A native of Davao City, Emata was set to arrive at Camp 4, the last stopover before the summit, at 2 p.m. (5 p.m. in Manila). He was set to rest at the camp before scaling the summit Thursday.