Just Pinned to Domestic and Global News: Indian mountaineer Satyarup Siddhanta poses alongside an image of himeself on the summit of Mount Everest. An Indian couple doctored his photo to claim they had made a successful ascent (AFP Photo/MANJUNATH KIRAN) More Satyarup Siddhanta only discovered he was at the centre of an Everest fraud when he spotted news of a couple whose false claim to have scaled the world's highest peak has set off a debate about how mountaineering feats are authenticated. The Indian couple had doctored his summit photo superimposing their own faces to support their claim and were awarded an official summit certificate from the Nepal authorities before other climbers raised doubts. Ascents of many of the world's highest peaks are validated based largely on trust a system that has until now worked within the close-knit community of high-altitude climbing. But as the numbers heading up Everest have boomed many are questioning whether summits need to be validated more scientifically. For an Everest summit climbers have to provide the Nepali or Chinese authorities with a photo from the top and a report from the team leaders and government liaison officers stationed a
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