Pune couple accused of morphing pics to claim they scaled Everest, probe ordered
Pune: Days after a city-based couple claimed to have successfully scaled Mount Everest, a probe has been ordered to verify their claims after a group of mountaineers approached Pune Police alleging that the two have faked their expedition by morphing photographs at the peak, a senior police official said on Wednesday.
Tarakeshwari and Dinesh Rathod, who are serving as constables in Pune Police, had claimed on June 5 that they became the first Indian couple to scale the Everest on May 23.
"Based on a complaint from some mountaineering organisations, an inquiry has been ordered, and till date the couple has not reported to duty," Pune Police Commissioner Rashmi Shukla said.
Asked whether the police will get in touch with Nepalese authorities to verify the couple's claims, she only said, "a probe has been ordered" and refused to elaborate further.
Surendra Shelke, one of the complainants and secretary of a city-based mountaineering association, had alleged that the couple had morphed pictures and there were several discrepancies in their version given about the summit, which can prove that they were making fake claims.
"If you see the individual photos of Dinesh, he is wearing a red and black down jacket at the summit and in the couple photo at the top, both are wearing orange down jacket and yellow and black shoes.”
"It is next to impossible to change clothes and boots mid-climb as there is a danger of frostbite and we are cent-percent sure that photographs were taken either at a base camp or at a studio and later it was meticulously morphed or cropped," Shelke said.
He added they even inquired with the mountaineers who were at the expedition between May 19 and May 24 and according to them nobody saw the couple beyond any of the base camps en-route to the summit.
Shelke further said they have nothing personal against the couple. However, if the issue is not brought to light, a wrong message will go and young aspirants in the mountaineering field will resort to such tactics.
Meanwhile, constable Dinesh Rathod said that they have submitted all the certificates received from the Nepal government upon completion of the summit, along with other proofs to the investigating officer of Pune Police. "Since, the matter is under probe, I would not like to comment on the issue. However, I am sure that the truth will come out," Rathod said.
He also said he along with his wife had already sent a complaint copy to Pune Police alleging that the group of mountaineers is defaming them. "We have sought action against these people who are trying to defame us by lodging such baseless complaints with the department."
While clarifying on not reporting to the job, he said that they have given a leave application to the department.