Daily Dispatch

Nepal pleads with climbers to return oxygen tanks

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Nepal is so short of oxygen canisters that it has asked climbers on Mount Everest to bring back their empties instead of abandoning them on mountain slopes, an official said on Monday, as it struggles with a second wave of the coronaviru­s.

The country issued climbing permits to more than 700 climbers for 16 Himalayan peaks — 408 to Mount Everest — for the April-may climbing season in a bid to get the mountainee­ring industry and tourism back up and running.

The Nepal mountainee­ring associatio­n has asked the climbers to help Nepal deal with a surge in Covid-19 cases that has brought the country’s fragile healthcare system to breaking point, as it has in neighbouri­ng India.

Kul Bahadur Gurung, a senior official with the NMA, said climbers and their Sherpa guides were estimated to have carried at least 3,500 oxygen bottles this season. These bottles often get buried in avalanches or are abandoned on the mountain slopes at the end of the expedition.

“We appeal to climbers and Sherpas to bring back their empty bottles wherever possible as they can be refilled and used for the treatment of the coronaviru­s patients who are in dire needs,” Gurung said.

On Sunday, Nepal reported a daily increase of 8,777 infections, 30 times the number recorded on April 9.

The total caseload stands at 394,667 and 3,720 deaths, according to government data.

Many private and community hospitals in Kathmandu have said they are unable to take any more patients due to a lack of oxygen and canisters.

“We need about 25,000 oxygen cylinders immediatel­y to save people from dying,” Samir Kumar Adhikari, a health ministry official said.

“We also need oxygen plants, compressor­s and ICU beds urgently,” Adhikari said.

Nepal has asked China to send 20,000 cylinders, some of which will be airlifted to meet urgent needs.

China has pledged to provide oxygen cylinders, ventilator­s and other medical supplies.

Nepal has only 1,600 intensive care beds and fewer than 600 ventilator­s for its population of 30m with just 0.7 doctors per 100,000 people, according to Actionaid Nepal.

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