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The 1.55 minute video was shot by one of the mountaineers from his helmet-mounted camera just before the group was to summit the 7,434 metre high Nanda Devi East peak sometime in late May.
The undated video shows all the eight climbers hooked in a line with a climbing rope even as the person who shot it swerves his head to record the serene and frosty climes of the peak, considered one of the most difficult mountains in the Indian Himalayan ranges.
The climbers can be seen standing in a queue on a slippery snow-clad track that would have taken them to the peak
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The mountaineers went missing on May 25 and even of the total eight bodies were brought down by the ITBP from about 19,000 feet to a lower base on July 3, following which helicopters lifted them for Pithoragarh.
A daunting operation by the men of the mountain-warfare trained force, code-named ‘daredevils’, clocked about500 hours spanning more than 15 days before success was achieved.
The video was released by the Indo-Tibetan Border Police at an event at their headquarters here, where the 15 members of the team were honoured by ITBP DG S S Deswal with mementos and a cash reward of Rs 20,000 each.
The team leader, second-in-command Ratan Singh Sonal, was awarded with a cash of Rs 25,000.
“The video was sourced from a photo card that our boys recovered from near the bodies that lay in a bowl-like region of the mountain. This is the only evidence and last moments record of the journey of the eight climbers,” ITBP Deputy Inspector General (DIG) A P S Nimbadia said.