Iran Daily

China closes its Everest base camp to tourists

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China has closed the base camp on its side of Mount Everest to visitors who do not have climbing permits.

Authoritie­s have resorted to the unusual move to deal with the mounting waste problem at the site, according to BBC.

The ban means tourists can only go as far as a monastery slightly below the 5,200 meters (17,060 feet) base camp level.

More people visit the mountain from the southern side in Nepal, but over the past years numbers have been rising steadily on the Chinese side as well.

The Chinese base camp, located in Tibet, is popular as it is accessible by car — whereas the Nepalese camp can only be reached by a hike of almost two weeks.

The world’s highest peak has been struggling with escalating levels of rubbish for years, as the number of visitors rises.

The Chinese Mountainee­ring Associatio­n said 40,000 visited its base camp in 2015, the most recent year with figures. A record 45,000 visited Nepal’s base camp in 20167, according to Nepal’s Ministry of Forests and Soil Conservati­on.

Ordinary tourists will only be banned from areas above Rongbuk monastery, which is around 5,000 meters above sea level, according to China’s state news agency Xinhua.

Mountainee­rs who have a permit to climb the 8,848 meters peak will still be allowed to use the higher camp.

In January, authoritie­s announced that they would limit the number of climbing permits each year to 300.

On Chinese social media, claims have spread in recent days that its base camp will be permanentl­y closed to tourists — but Xinhua cited officials denying that.

The official announceme­nt about the closure was made in December, on the website of the Tibetan authoritie­s.

It stated that three cleanup operations last spring had collected eight tons of waste, including mountainee­ring equipment climbers had left behind.

This year’s cleanup efforts will also try to remove the bodies of mountainee­rs who have died in the so-called death zone above 8,000 meters, where the air is too thin to sustain life for long.

Due to the cold and high altitude, these bodies often remain on the mountain for years or even decades.

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GETTY IMAGES

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