Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi

Home | Headlines | Photos | Region | People | Time | Events | Business | Sports | Showbiz | IT | Politics | Military | Society | Education | Life | Health | Most-viewed Story | Most-viewed Coverage
  Muzi.com : Muzi (English) : News
  Everest climbing season threatened by Tibet turmoil
Last updated: 2008-03-22


Everest climbing season threatened by Tibet turmoil
2008-03-22

Category
Mountain Climbing
Nations
Nepal
Event
2008 Beijing Olympics Torch
2008 Tibet Riot
Expeditions to Mount Everest are being cancelled because of Chinese restrictions on access to Tibet as it prepares to put the Olympic torch on the summit and clamps down on unrest in the Himalayan region, an organiser said.

Russell Brice, a New Zealander and leading Himalayan expedition organiser, said he had called off plans to send clients up the Tibetan side of the world's highest peak and that other teams were also cancelling.

"I cancelled my expedition three days ago. I think most people on the north side are cancelling and some are trying to shift to the south side" of the mountain in Nepal, he told AFP from his office in the French Alps.

He said his 16 clients this year, who pay tens of thousands of dollars each to try to reach the top of the world, "have taken time off work, been training, got themselves mentally prepared -- so it's a huge blow for them."

Organisers hoping to send climbers up the north side of the 8,848-metre (29,028-feet) mountain have in recent months been grappling with uncertainty over whether the mountain will even be open.

Earlier this year, China said it would closely vet prospective foreign climbers applying for a permit.

China plans to send the Olympic torch to the summit of Everest in early May, and sources in the mountaineering community said Beijing was eager to keep pro-Tibet protestors away -- especially while the torch is in the area.

Brice said he was cancelling because he had not yet received his licence.

In addition, Tibet -- including access to the north side of the peak -- has been closed off indefinitely to foreigners following a wave of unrest there last week and amid a major security clampdown.

Brice said he had unable to guarantee to clients that they would be allowed in when the trek to base camp on the Tibetan side of the mountain is due to start early next month.

"It's very difficult to find out what's going on, to find out what is true and what is a rumour," he said.

"We can't blame the China Tibet Mountaineering Association because there are factors involved that are way beyond their control," he added.

Brice also said his company was also supposed to be fixing kilometres (miles) of ropes on the mountain this season for several other expeditions, including the Chinese Olympic torch climb.

"I was supposed to be laying out the ropes that will be used by expeditions including the Chinese one, but have not been given a permit," he said.

That huge logistics operation -- usually carried out by teams of hardened Nepali and Tibetan sherpas -- has also been called off, meaning Chinese authorities will have to arrange the roping of the mountain themselves.

He said other mountaineering agencies "might try and shift their expeditions to the south side, but other people are worried about overloading on the south side" in Nepal.

On the southern approach, expedition organisers are confused as while the Nepal government insists the restrictions do not apply to Nepal, the country is coming under Chinese pressure to keep the mountain clear and is also refusing to issue permits.

"Leaders and western guides from three expeditions are already here and we don't know what to tell them," said Ishwori Poudel, who runs an expedition firm and has 55 foreign climbers waiting to find out if they can attempt Everest.

First summitted in 1953 by Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay, Everest has since been summitted at least 3,000 times, and the mountain usually sees dozens of commercial expeditions annually that bring in millions of dollars to Nepal and Tibet.

 Mountain Climbing   2008 Beijing Olympics Torch  2008 Tibet Riot 
  Profile News85GalleryLinks  
  Authorities: Little chance Ore. climbers are alive (2009-12-15)
  Aircraft fails to find missing Mt. Hood climbers (2009-12-14)
  Ten climbers missing after avalanche in French Alps (2008-08-24)
  In K2 aftermath, lessons learned (2008-08-06)
  Helicopters save two Dutch climbers after K2 tragedy (2008-08-04)
  Falling rock kills climber on Oregon's Mount Hood (2008-07-28)
  Search for adventurer Fossett resumes in Nevada (2008-07-13)
  Transplant recipient completes Yosemite ascent (2008-06-28)
  Hiker dies on Mount Rainier, 2 wait for rescue (2008-06-10)
  NY skyscraper hosts 2 daredevil stunts in 1 day (2008-06-05)
  Sherpa in bid to conquer Everest for 18th time (2008-05-11)
  Everest torch silence breeds frustration (2008-04-29)
  Everest climbing season threatened by Tibet turmoil (2008-03-22)
  Cliffs and canyon at Utah's Zion Park (2008-03-18)
  Everest climbers prepare for ban (2008-03-16)
  Edmund Hillary, first atop Everest, dies (2008-01-10)
  Everest beckons more Japanese seniors (2007-10-14)
  Study: Everest deadlier for old climbers (2007-08-15)
  Two climbers die in fall from Mt McKinley (2007-05-19)
  Buddha paintings found in Nepalese cave (2007-05-05)
  Explorers find ancient caves and paintings in Nepal (2007-05-03)
  Mountaineers testify to warming's effect (2007-04-07)
  Climbers relied on exercise, pep talks (2007-02-21)
  3 Mt. Hood climbers await rescue (2007-02-19)
  Rescuer credits dog with saving climbers (2007-02-19)
Related People
  • Heinrich Harrer
  • Brad Pitt
  • Related Events
  • Japan Diplomacy
  • China Diplomacy
  • Nepal Royal Family Massacre
  • China-Japan

  • Stories Coverages

    NewsGuide EventCityPeopleShowCompany 
     ENTSportsBIZEDULifeMilitaryPoliticsSocietyHealth 
    [2009 Flight 253 Terrorism Plot]: Airline passengers see tighter security (21:38 12/27)

    [2009 Christmas]: Merry Xmas in Hollywood: Box-office record falls (21:38 12/27)


    [2009 Fort Hood Shootings]: Airliner plot raises fears about al-Qaida in Yemen (21:38 12/27)


    [2009 US Health Reform]: House backers of public insurance option may yield (21:38 12/27)


    [111th Congress]: House backers of public insurance option may yield (21:38 12/27)


    [SARS in China]: China SARS victims suffer hormone treatment effects: report (21:38 12/27)


    [2009 Swine Flu]: 'Rapidly fatal' swine flu kills in different ways: study (21:38 12/27)


    [2009 US Tax Crackdown]: UBS whistleblower seeks prison postponement (21:38 12/27)

    [U.S. Markets]: Stocks to wrap up 2009 on high note (21:38 12/27)


    [Allen Stanford Fraud Case]: Feds investigating Stanford ties to lawmakers: report (21:38 12/27)



    Muzi.com

    Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
    All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.