The identity of the famous 'Green Boots' climber, whose body has been a well-known landmark on Mount Everest for nearly 30 years, has been confirmed through a DNA test. The remains, preserved in ice and snow at a high altitude, belong to Indian climber Dorje Morup, 47. Previously, many believed the body was that of another Indian climber, Tsewang Paljor, 28. The identification was verified by the Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP), which plans to recover the body from Everest's dangerous 'death zone' later this year. Morup was part of a six-person ITBP expedition in 1996 that suffered heavy losses during a severe storm. He, along with Tsewang Paljor and Tsewang Samanla, perished during the incident, which resulted in eight deaths overall.
Bias read (Center): The article presents factual information about the identification of a climber's remains on Everest, focusing on the discovery process and the planned recovery efforts. It does not exhibit clear ideological bias, loaded language, or one-sided sourcing. The content is primarily informational and does
Why these scores (Factual 85 · Objective 70): Factuality is high as the article provides details consistent with known information about the 1996 Everest disaster and the identification of Dorje Morup. However, the article ends abruptly mid-sentence, suggesting possible truncation or incomplete reporting. Objectivity is lower due to the emotion


