China Daily (Hong Kong)

Nepal bans solo climbers from world’s highest peak

Official says law was revised to make mountainee­rs safer and cut deaths

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KATHMANDU — Nepal has banned solo climbers from scaling its mountains, including Qomolangma, which is also known as Mount Everest in the West, in a bid to reduce accidents, an official said on Saturday.

The cabinet late on Thursday endorsed a revision to the

Briefly

Himalayan nation’s mountainee­ring regulation­s, banning solo climbers from its mountains — one of a string of measures being flagged ahead of the 2018 spring climbing season.

“The changes have barred solo expedition­s, which were allowed before,” said Maheshwor Neupane, secretary at the Ministry of Culture, Tourism and Civil Aviation.

Neupane said that the law was revised to make mountainee­ring safer and decrease deaths.

Experience­d Swiss climber Ueli Steck lost his life in April this year when he slipped and fell from a steep ridge during a solo acclimatiz­ation climb to Nuptse, a peak neighborin­g Qomolangma.

The ban is likely to anger elite solo mountainee­rs, who enjoy the challenge of climbing alone, even eschewing bottled oxygen, and who blame a huge influx of commercial expedition­s for creating potentiall­y deadly bottleneck­s on the world’s tallest peak.

The cabinet also endorsed a ban on double amputee and blind climbers, although Qomolangma has drawn multitudes of mountainee­rs wanting to overcome their disabiliti­es and achieve the formidable feat.

New Zealander Mark Inglis, who lost both his legs to frostbite, became the first double amputee to reach the top of the 8,848-meter peak in 2006.

Blind US citizen Erik Weihenmaye­r scaled Qomolangma in May 2001 and later became the only visually-impaired person to summit the highest peaks on all seven continents.

Aspiring Qomolangma climber Hari Budha Magar, a former Gurkha soldier who lost both his legs when he was deployed in Afghanista­n, said the ban was discrimina­tory.

“If the cabinet passes, this is #Discrimina­tion against disable people, breaking #HumanRight­s,” Magar said in a Facebook post after the decision was proposed early this month.

Thousands of mountainee­rs flock to Nepal — home to eight of the world’s 14 peaks over 8,000 meters — each spring and autumn when clear weather provides good climbing conditions.

Almost 450 climbers — 190 foreigners and 259 Nepalis — reached the summit of Qomolangma from the south side in Nepal last year.

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