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Miraculous story of survival high on Everest as Sherpa guide missing for a week found alive

A Sherpa climbing guide who was believed to have died high on Mount Everest was found crawling back to Base Camp after spending almost a week on the mountain with no food or bottled oxygen.
For six days, there had been no radio contact or sign of Hillary Dawa Sherpa, 52, who was last seen on May 29 resting above Camp 3, which sits at 7,060 meters (23,163 feet).
He became separated from his client and climbing team, who had already descended and were among the last group on Everest before it closed for the season. The ladders across the Khumbu Icefall, which are carefully fixed by Sherpas to help climbers navigate the most treacherous section of the climb, had already been dismantled, according to one mountaineering company.
With Hillary Dawa alone on the world’s tallest mountain in perilous conditions for so long, his family had already begun funeral rites for him.
But tragedy turned to joy on Thursday when a cleaning crew spotted him crawling through the icefall, exhausted and frostbitten, but alive.
When we first heard about it (the rescue), we could not be sure if that person was indeed our father, Hillary Dawa’s daughter, Mendo Lhamu, told the Associated Press. So to be certain we asked for photos to be sent and then only we were sure and very hpy.
He was given food and water, and airlifted to hospital in the Nepalese cital Kathmandu, where he was treated for frostbite and other complications, according to news agency.
Video posted on social media shows Hillary Dawa being carried on the back of another climber as they descended through the rocky terrain. Still in his yellow-and-blue climbing jacket, he can be seen in later video being wheeled on a trolley from the helipad at HAMS hospital in Kathmandu.
Many in the mountaineering community have hailed Hillary Dawa’s survival as miraculous.
This is nothing short of a miracle surviving so many days on the mountains facing such harsh condition, Ang Tshering Sherpa, a leading figure in the community, told .
The rescue cs off the busiest season ever on Everest with more than 1,000 climbers summiting the mountain’s south side, including a record 274 in a single day on May 20.
Videos of climbers waiting in long queues in an area known as the death zone – where the air is too thin to breathe unaided for long – on their way to the summit have once again made headlines, alongside record-breaking ascents from both Nepali and foreign climbers.
A miraculous story of survival
Hillary Dawa’s remarkable self-rescue has raised questions about why a search team had not been assembled when he was reported missing a week ago.
When search helicopters went looking for him this week, they found no sign of the climber, hiking company Nepal Mount Everest said in a social media post.
Those who found Hillary Dawa were members of the Sagarmatha Pollution Control Committee (SPCC), which sets the routes, ropes and ladders through the Khumbu Icefall at the start of the season, and is in charge of removing waste from the mountain once climbers have left.
Lama Kazi Sherpa, of the SPCC, told that his team located Hillary Dawa above Base Camp near the icefall and brought him down to safety.
In video posted after his rescue, Hillary Dawa said he had slipped and fallen into a crevasse near Camp 1 at around 6,000 meters (19,800 feet) and spent two days inside the icy fissure before managing to free himself, according to local media.
Hillary Dawa, a high-altitude guide for a small Kathmandu-based company called Himalayan Traverse, and his Polish client were descending Everest after failing to summit on May 29, reported.
British climber Chris Thrall, who was also a client with Himalayan Traverse and the last person to see Hillary Dawa before he went missing, said in an Instagram post that he was elated and so hpy for him and his wonderful family, after believing him to have died on the mountain.
In video posted from Kathmandu on Wednesday, Thrall said that the Polish climber was battling frostbite and had descended with the Sherpa guide Thrall was climbing with, leaving Hillary Dawa and him to descend together.
Hillary Dawa had sat down for a rest with his backpack as they descended from Camp 4 at 7,900 meters (25,920 feet), he said.
I turned and I said, ‘Hillary are you ok brother?’ And he said ‘yes, fine Chris, please go’, Thrall said, adding that the guide had a radio and satellite phone with him.
According to Thrall, it wasn’t unusual for Hillary Dawa and other Sherpas to take a rest, and he expected him to catch up has he had done before.
On his way to Camp 3, Thrall said he came across the Polish climber, who had run out of bottled oxygen and was suffering with frostbite. Their climb had been challenging and had taken much longer than planned, he said.
What should have been five days to the summit and back took us 11 days. That’s how challenging the conditions were, he said.
With Hillary Dawa above him, Thrall, a former British Royal Marine, said he made the tough decision to help the struggling climber who was at risk of hypothermia, and they made their long descent to Camp 2, a journey that he said took about 19 hours in weather that changed from snowy to whiteout conditions.
In none of that time at all when I looked back up the mountain did I see Hillary descend, he said. To say serious alarm bells were ringing, as in I think the worst has hpened, would be an understatement.
CNN cannot independently verify the account and has reached out to Himalayan Traverse for comment.
The incident has deepened concerns about the safety of Nepali workers on the mountain, which has seen an explosion of commercial guiding outfitters in recent years.

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Middle East conflict pushing millions into hunger, WFP says

By Olivia Le Poidevin
GENEVA, June 5 () – The Middle East conflict is pushing millions of people closer to hunger, as rising fuel and transport costs drive up food prices while funding shortfalls force aid agencies to scale back assistance, the U.N. World Food Programme said on Friday.
Joint U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran in February triggered a regional conflict stretching across the Gulf and into Lebanon, disrupting key shipping routes, including the Strait of Hormuz, forcing vessels to reroute and sharply constraining global energy flows and supply chains.
In March, the WFP forecast as many as 45 million people could fall into acute food insecurity if oil prices remained around $100 per barrel through June. That scenario is now unfolding, the agency said, with benchmark crude prices staying above that level since early March.
Households in Afghanistan, Somalia and Sri Lanka are among the most seriously affected and face mounting pressure due to higher fuel costs, food price spikes, income losses and disrupted trade.
In Somalia, 6.5 million people – roughly a third of the population – are expected to face severe hunger in 2026, while Afghanistan could see 17.4 million people affected, the WFP said. The situation is projected to worsen, with an additional 2.5 million Somalis and 2.3 million Afghans at risk of falling into food insecurity if disruptions persist. Both countries are reliant on imported energy and food.
The Middle East crisis comes amid a deep funding shortfall for aid agencies. The WFP said it expected to serve 1.5 million fewer people globally in 2026, and an extra 9 million fewer if the situation persists for six months.
In Afghanistan, surging fuel prices have driven up aid transport costs as much as fivefold, and delivery times have shot up from 10 days up to as many as 75 days as trucks had to use alternative corridors, the WFP said.
In Somalia, soaring jet fuel prices are leading to higher operational costs for the United Nations Humanitarian Air Service – the only means to safely access hard-to-reach areas, the WFP said.
(Reporting by Olivia Le Poidevin; Editing by Kate Mayberry)

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Charleston’s Katsubo gives free ramen to Mario Kart player

NORTH CHARLESTON — A local ramen restaurant celebrated its first year in business in an action-packed way.
Katsubō Chicken and Ramen, a Park Circle eatery that specializes in authentic Janese dishes with a special focus on ramen, hosted a Mario Kart competition on May 31 in honor of its anniversary.
The single-round, sudden-death tournament pitted more than 30 players against each other as they played the classic video game. The grand prize? Free ramen for a year and bragging rights for the top finishers.
Katsubō’s general manager, Sebastian Estes, said the competition was a way not only celebrate the inaugural year, but to thank the customers who’ve helped make it such a successful one.
For our one-year anniversary, we wanted to have a party as a way to give back to everyone who has supported us over the past year and be a way to reach out to new people who haven’t heard of us before and give the staff something as a token of preciation, he said. ‘
Of the contestants, Christopher Broms took home first place and won free ramen for a year. Derek Pena earned second place and will receive free gyoza for a year, while Christopher Smith came in third place and won free lemonade for a year.
The restaurant, located in the old Jackrabbit Filly building at 4628 Spruill Ave., has been hosting monthly events called Kickback at Katsubō on Sundays, where community members can listen to live music and try some of the restaurant’s food.
Estes said that Sunday’s competition was a cumulative Kickback celebrating a successful first year.
Adding in the Mario Kart aspect came naturally as Estes said the restaurant always has at least one Nintendo Switch on for those who want to come in and play some games. But the May 31 event was the biggest turnout they had ever had for a Kickback with about 80 people attending.
We had a full restaurant and patio, with a band playing live music. It just turned into a huge block party and was a lot of fun, Estes said. It was awesome seeing people throughout the tournament making friends with each other and sharing numbers and asking when the next tournament was going to be.
Through the latest event, Katsubō was able to foster an even larger community than the one it currently has in the area.
There were quite a few people there for the tournament who had never even heard of us. So we were able to build out our community more just by sharing our name, Estes said. When you have all of these people close together and competing for about two hours, just seeing them walk around and talk to each other, hanging out, listening to live music and eating some good food, it feels great.
Estes said he plans to move away from the monthly Kickback events, citing the significant stress in planning them, especially since they are held on Sundays when Katsubo is normally closed.
However, future video game tournaments could be in the works. Estes said people have already been asking him to host a Super Smash Bros. challenge, and he’s considering a quarterly event or maybe a Thursday night theme.
The world is kind of like our oyster, he said. We’ve been here for a year, and we’re still trying new things. There’s really no limit to what we can do.

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CT man accused of using trucking scheme to defraud CT wholesalers

A Connecticut man is accused of defrauding wholesale markets throughout the state out of hundreds of thousands of dollars through a trucking scheme involving fraudulent checks.
A federal grand jury in Hartford returned a 10-count indictment against 61-year-old Michael Salvaggi of Seymour, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Connecticut said in a statement issued Thursday.
The indictment charges Salvaggi with eight counts of wire fraud and a single count each of mail fraud and interstate transport of property taken by fraud, federal officials said.
The indictment, which was returned on May 28, alleges that Salvaggi claimed that he owned trucking and wholesale food businesses in various names, including A.J. Produce LLC, Express Transportation, Salvaggi Brothers Trucking and Express Fresh Produce & Dairy, officials said. He would allegedly contact wholesale food suppliers in Connecticut and other states to arrange the purchase of food on credit or payment on delivery or pickup, according to authorities.
Once the suppliers provided Salvaggi with food, he would allegedly pay them with fraudulent checks, federal officials said. According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, numerous wholesale food companies suffered a combined loss of hundreds of thousands of dollars.
The charges Salvaggi faces expose him to a maximum of 190 years in prison, officials said.
Salvaggi has been in custody since March 7, when he was arrested in St. John’s County, Florida, in connection with state charges pursued by authorities in Pennsylvania. He is expected to be arraigned in connection with the indictment on June 18 in federal court in New Haven.

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What happens when you store food in plastic containers

Plastic is inescable in modern day. When it comes to stashing leftovers or picking up takeout, plastic containers seem to be a quick fix.
Still, a growing number of studies pointing to the harmful effects of plastic on food have some people rethinking this decision. How valid are these concerns, and can you keep using plastic containers?
Concerns about plastic usually revolve around fears the substances and chemicals inside the plastic can leach into food. Bisphenol A, polyethylene and polypropylene are among the most common chemicals used in plastic containers. These chemicals have been linked to potential health effects like increased blood pressure, Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease, especially for vulnerable individuals like children or pregnant women.
But experts say you don’t need to throw away your plastic containers just yet.
According to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, there isn’t sufficient scientific evidence showing the microplastics and nanoplastics from plastic food packaging can migrate into foods and beverages.
The real danger comes when the plastic container is heated, said Dr. Joseph S. Alpert, a professor of medicine at the University of Arizona. Microwaving excites plastic molecules and causes them to, indeed, sneak into food.
As for storing food in plastic in the fridge for a few days, it is probably reasonably safe, said Alpert. He added the safest bet is still to store food in glass containers that do not contain lead.
What is the healthiest container to store food in?
There are many commercial plastics on the market, and the answer depends on determining what type you’re using. The first place to check is the identification number, officially known as Resin Identification Codes, embedded on every plastic container. Located within a small triangle, they range from 1 through 7 and offer clues as to what the container is made of and whether it is recyclable.

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‘Chopped’ champion opens Kush Modern Mediterranean in Somerville

The backstory: Duffy, a graduate of New York’s French Culinary Institute, now called the International Culinary Center, took her $50,000 prize money from the Food Network show and opened a food truck, which she operated on the Rose Kennedy Greenway. The truck was a launching pad, she said, kind of a scaled-down version of what we’re doing at the restaurant. Her sister, Sara Wahid, is her head chef. The two are ethnically Pakistani, said Duffy, but when my fascination with cooking began, I wanted to eat anything but Pakistani, so I explored Mediterranean.
What to eat: The menu delves into the Levant, North Africa, and the Eastern Mediterranean. Small plates include lamb merguez kofta, lovely little meatballs that come in a small terra cotta dish with herb-yogurt sauce; and a trio of delicious dips — beet hummus, tzatziki, and spicy moutabel (charred eggplant) — with crispy pita chips. Entrees feature a juicy lamb burger on toasted brioche with whipped feta, pickled shallots, and sweet potato fries, and roasted cod on a tomato-fennel sauce. Vegan lentils and rice arrives as a deep little cake covered with crispy shallots. For dessert, the pistachio-cardamom ice cream sandwich (homemade ice cream!) is memorable.
What to drink: It’s a relief to encounter a drinks list that has its eye solely on the menu, not designed to impress either The Cital Grille crowd or the naturalistas. There are a handful of wines — several Greek, one Armenian, one French, and one Italian when we visited — each offered by the pour or the bottle. It’s pretty hard to make a false step. A short list of cocktails, including citrus vodka with elderflower liqueur, is presented in the same spirit. Ours were handsomely done.
The takeaway: Kush is a name for cannabis, and also for a mountain in Pakistan; Duffy chose it for the latter reason. She is a huge talent, and her enthusiasm spills over in the small, modern dining room, which her contractor husband built. The service is very friendly, the food beautifully made and thoughtfully presented. When Duffy won Chopped, Martha Stewart told her, You’re elegant, you’re eloquent, and a damn good chef. What a way to start a culinary career.
5 Sanborn Court, Inman Square, Somerville, 774-623-4131, Small plates and salads $15-$26; large plates $23-$28.

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