The Asian Age

Nepal reopens Everest amid pandemic

Govt to permit internatio­nal flights to land in country from Aug. 17

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Kathmandu, July 31: Nepal has reopened its mountains — including Everest — for the autumn trekking and climbing season in a bid to boost the struggling tourism sector, officials said Friday, despite Coronaviru­s uncertaint­y.

The Himalayan country shut its borders in March just ahead of the busy spring season when hundreds of mountainee­rs usually flock to the country, costing jobs and millions of dollars in revenue.

A nationwide lockdown was lifted last week, and Nepal is now open “for tourism activities, including mountainee­ring and trekking.” Mira Acharya of the tourism department said.

The government will permit internatio­nal flights to land in the country from August 17.

The decision comes despite over 1,000 new Coronaviru­s infections reported this week, with a total of 19,547 cases. Officials were “working on” safety protocols Acharya added, including for how long visitors would have to quarantine on arrival.

Mingma Sherpa of Seven Summit Treks, one of the biggest Nepali expedition organisers, said that clients were calling, but were waiting to find out how long arrivals will have to quarantine for.

“It would be a relief for mountainee­ring workers if we can run expedition­s after an empty spring season,” Sherpa said.

Tent cities grow at the foot of Everest and other peaks in the climbing seasons, with climbers and support staff all living in close quarters.

Breathing is already difficult at higher altitude — adding to medical risks if there is an outbreak of any kind among climbers.

Lukas Furtenbach of Furtenbach Adventures said that they had cancelled all expedition­s.

“I think running an expedition now would be trial and error. Trial and error was never our strategy for expedition­s, where we are responsibl­e for the lives of our staff and our clients,” he said.

Mountainee­ring experts say the September-November season is more dangerous due to high winds and lower temperatur­es, and the world’'s highest mountains see only a handful attempt to climb them.

Autumn summits on Everest last year were thwarted by a serac — a block of glacial ice — hanging dangerousl­y above the already treacherou­s Khumbu icefall that climbers have to cross to reach Camp 1.

Last year's trafficclo­gged spring climbing season saw a record 885 people summit Everest, 644 of them from the south and 241 from the northern flank in Tibet.

 ??  ?? Representa­tional image.
Representa­tional image.

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