The Mercury News

Uluru scaled by final climbers

-

ULURU, AUSTRALIA >> Nature seemed to be siding with indigenous Australian­s’ demand for Uluru to be respected as a sacred site on Friday when high winds threatened to prematurel­y end the generation­s-old tradition of climbing the sandstone monolith.

Rangers warned hundreds of anxious tourists who gathered at the base of the iconic rock before dawn that they would miss their last opportunit­y to ever scale its 1,140-foot summit unless blustery conditions subsided.

But the winds calmed and the first of around 1,000 climbers began their ascent at a chain handhold up the steep western face three hours later than scheduled. An indigenous onlooker booed them.

The ascent was permanentl­y closed to climbers late in the afternoon, while those already on the rock had until sunset to find their way down. A potential medical problem was reported with a climber but authoritie­s could not immediatel­y provide details.

Janet Ishikawa flew from her Hawaiian home to central Australia to make the climb on the final possible day. She likened the Uluru controvers­y to a furor over plans to build a giant telescope on Hawaii’s highest peak, which protesters consider sacred.

“It’s a total overreacti­on. All of a sudden they want to take ownership of all this stuff,” Ishikawa said. “They say you shouldn’t climb because of all this sacred stuff. I can still respect it and climb it.”

The ban was a unanimous decision made two years ago by 12 members of the Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park Board of Management. But it’s an outcome that has divided both indigenous Australian­s as well as the wider world.

The polarity of opinions has been highlighte­d in recent months as thousands of visitors converged on one of Australia’s most famous landmarks, once known as Ayers Rock, to make a final trek to the top. Tourists have been illegally camping on roadsides for miles because the local camping ground and accommodat­ion were booked.

Sammy Wilson, who chaired the board that banned the climb, described the prohibitio­n as a cause for celebratio­n. Wilson is member of the Anangu tribe who are Uluru’s traditiona­l owners.

“If I travel to another country and there is a sacred site, an area of restricted access, I don’t enter or climb it, I respect it,” Wilson said.

“It is the same here for Anangu. We welcome tourists here. We are not stopping tourism, just this activity.”

There has long been tension within the indigenous population around the money that climbers bring and the rock’s significan­ce as a sacred site.

Starting today, climbing becomes punishable by a $4,300 fine.

 ?? LUKAS COCH — AAP IMAGE VIA AP ?? Tourists climb the sandstone monolith called Uluru that dominates Australia’s arid center at Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park on Friday, the last day climbing is allowed.
LUKAS COCH — AAP IMAGE VIA AP Tourists climb the sandstone monolith called Uluru that dominates Australia’s arid center at Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park on Friday, the last day climbing is allowed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States