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Author Topic: Don't be cheap Asian lady, the highest point ain't cheap, just pay & be thankful  (Read 140 times)

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Offline theking

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Chinese woman and her Mount Everest rescuers feud over $10,000 fee

A Chinese woman is under fire for refusing to pay $10,000 to the Sherpa who rescued her from Mount Everest. The South China Morning Post reported that the woman, who was only identified as Liu, was found unconscious near the mountain's summit by a fellow Chinese national, Fan Jiangtao, and his guide.





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Offline theking

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Of course there's going to be "backlash". What does she think this rescue is? Some flea market or swap meet in China where one can haggle prices?? 

I say let this cheap azz b1tch die up there as she thinks her life is only worth 4k?? ;D:

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Chinese woman faces backlash for refusing to pay Sherpa guide $10K fee for Everest rescue

The fee: According to Fan, Liu refused to pay $10,000 to Xie's Sherpa guide as a rescue fee. “Each of us paid the guide tips of $1,800, and she said she would pay $1,500 as tips. For the rescue fee of $10,000, Liu said she would only pay $4,000,” Fan said, according to SCMP. What she said angered me.




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Offline theking

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deservingly so IMO:

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A Chinese climber saved from Mount Everest has been caught in a social-media firestorm after being accused of refusing to pay a promised $10,000 fee to the Sherpas who rescued her

A Chinese woman saved from Everest was accused of refusing to pay the Sherpas who rescued her.

Social-media users cited her fellow climbers who said she paid only $4,000 of the $10,000 fee.

Amid the fallout, her partner company said it would take responsibility and pay her rescue expenses.

The rescue of a Chinese woman from Mount Everest kicked off a social-media firestorm last week after she was accused of refusing to pay the Sherpa who helped to save her.

While her climbing organization and the firm employing the Sherpas said that they'd settled all claims, the allegations against the climber have roiled into a social-media frenzy that's seen her attacked in thousands of comments and doxxed.

The dispute hinges on a single event — a promise made without the climber's knowledge that ultimately saved her life.



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