Record-breaking Nepalese Sherpa to scatter Hillary’s ashes on Mt. Everest

Kathmandu, Apr.6 (ANI): A record-breaking Nepalese Sherpa has flown to Mount Everest to prepare to scatter the ashes of its most celebrated climber, Sir Edmund Hillary.

Apa, who with 19 successful climbs holds the record for the most trips to the summit, flew from the Nepalese capital, Katmandu, to Lukla, where he will begin yet another trek up Everest – this time to deposit Sir Edmund’s remaining ashes and clean up the peak, reports the Daily Express.

“I have three goals during my 20th climb of Everest. I will be taking and scattering the ashes of Edmund Hillary at the summit, clean up the mountain and promote Nepal as tourism destination,” said the 49-year-old Apa, who like most Sherpas goes by one name.

Apa and his fellow climbers – 17 other Sherpas and 12 Westerners lan to collect 15,400lb (7,000kg) of rubbish, a growing environmental problem on the Himalayan peak. They plan to pay porters to help bring down the refuse.

Apa and his team plan to scale the summit in May, when the weather is most favourable. (ANI)

56th anniversary of first ascent on Mount Everest celebrated in Siliguri

Silliguri, May 30 (ANI): The Himalayan Nature and Adventure Foundation (HNAF), a NGO in Siliguri on Friday celebrated the 56th anniversary of climbing the Mount Everest for the first time.

Sir Edmund Hillary of Newzeland and Nepali Sherpa Tenzing Norgay became the first people to reach the top of the 8,850 metre (29,035 feet) mountain on May 29, 1953.

The day was marked by felicitating the statue of Tenzing Norgey in the morning. A blood donation camp was organised later to promote adventure sports among the younger generation.

“The main objective is to promote adventure sports. We are promoting adventure sports because it has been losing interest in North and West Bengal,” said Dipesh Raha, general secretary, HNAF.

Chirag Chatterjee, a blood donor said it is a good way to promote adventure sports in the state.

“Definitely this event surely encourages us to look forward to adventure sports because we can meet various people who have remarkable achievements in adventure sports. There are many mountaineers joining this event and they are real life inspirations for us. That’s why this is a very successful event which draws us towards adventure sports,” said Chatterjee.

More than 3,000 people have climbed Everest from the Nepali and Tibetan sides since 1953. (ANI)

Record-breaking Everest climber raises environmental concerns

Kathmandu – A Nepalese mountaineer, who shattered his own record with his 19th successful scaling of Mount Everest, Monday expressed concern over trash and the impact of global warming on the mountain.

Appa Sherpa, 48, who reached the 8,848-metre summit earlier this week, called the impacts alarming.

“We have only one Everest, we need to clean and protect it,” Appa said upon his arrival in Kathmandu Monday morning. “I am willing to climb Everest again next year to raise awareness.”

Appa was part of Eco Everest Expedition 2009 which aimed to highlight problems of global warming and collect trash littered on the mountain.

The expedition said it retrieved as much as 5 tons of trash, including parts of a helicopter that crashed on the mountain in 1973.

“The warming temperature is increasing the volume of glacial lakes resulting in the shrinking of glaciers,” Appa said. “As for trash, there is still more on the mountain and we need to clean it.”

When Appa reached the summit earlier this week, he placed a banner reading, “Stop Climate Change – Let the Himalayas live.”

More than 150 climbers have reached the summit of Everest this year alone.

With the increase in the number of expeditions, Nepal’s government has tightened regulations for climbers, requiring them to bring back all equipment they use.

In the past, expeditions left behind oxygen bottles, tents and ropes.

Sir Edmund Hillary, from New Zealand, and Tenzing Norgay, from Nepal were the first people to reach the summit of Everest on May 29, 1959.

Since then 2,800 individuals have reached the summit and 213 have died trying.(dpa)

Nepal bowls googly to Everest Twenty20 teams

Kathmandu, April 12 (IANS) Cricket, described as the glorious game of uncertainty, lived up to its reputation in Nepal Sunday as state officials barred entry to the two teams of western amateur cricketers headed to play Twenty20 at the foot of Mt Everest.

Thirty amateur players accompanied by 20 support staff had left Kathmandu Saturday to journey to the Himalayan region in north Nepal and play a match at Gorakh Shep, a plateau 5,165 metres above sea level.

However, they were stymied Sunday by a googly from the warden of the national wildlife park that fell on their route.

The two teams, named after the first two Everest heroes, Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay Sherpa, were told they would require official permission to enter the national park.

The Dainikee web agency said the officials had said they were under public pressure to stop the teams but did not elaborate who or why.

The much-hyped match is intended to raise money for three projects, including one started by Hillary himself in north Nepal.

The Khumjung School was established by Hillary for his beloved Sherpas in the 1960s and is now a full-fledged high school with his statue. The other two charities are the Himalayan Trust UK, founded by the New Zealander to provide basic infrastructure to the Sherpas like health, education and monastery repairs, and the Lord’s Taverners, established by a group of actors in the tavern at Lord’s cricket ground to encourage youngsters play cricket, especially those with disabilities.

The match is the brain child of Briton Richard Kirtley, who visited Gorakh Shep three years ago, thought it looked like the Oval cricket ground and promptly began to dream an impossible dream. ‘The British have a proud history of being eccentric,’ Kirtley told the media in Kathmandu. ‘I am keeping up with the tradition.’

The players, aged between 22 and 36, include bankers, lawyers and former cops who have two things in common: a zest for cricket and adventure. While English skipper Andrew Strauss is the honorary captain of Team Tenzing, vice captain Alastair Cook is doing the honours for Team Hillary. Also accompanying the team are four umpires from the England Cricket Board.

The bar comes after Nepal’s nodal tourism agency Nepal Tourism Board hailed the players, saying they would boost tourism in the Himalayan republic that has been falling due to frequent strikes and a crippling 20-hour daily power outage.

Jeffrey Archer takes swipe at Sir Edmund Hillary

Wellington, Mar 15 (ANI): Author and ex-UK politician Jeffrey Archer has poked fun at Sir Edmund Hillary’s legacy with the novel ‘Paths of Glory’.

The book is a fictionalized account of the life of George Mallory, who died on Everest in 1924, 29 years before Hillary climbed the world’s tallest peak with Nepali Sherpa Tenzing Norgay, reports The NZPA.

Mallory was last spotted a few hundred metres below the summit and died shortly afterwards. Many of his admirers think he made it to the top and deserves Hillary’s spot in history.

His new tome, which concludes with Mallory becoming the “first man to stand on top of the earth”, has once again sparked rumors about whether the adventurer might have beaten Sir Ed to the summit by 29 years.

However, fellow mountaineer and friend of Sir Ed, Graeme Dingle, said of Archer’s premise: “He’s dreaming. There’s essentially no chance Mallory got to the top. All the evidence points to them not making it.”

He said Archer’s interest in portraying Mallory as the first to summit the mountain was motivated by wounded English pride at having been beaten by a colonial.

“The English were desperate to get to the top and they didn’t get there, even in 1953. I think the English are pretty sensitive about it. They’ve got nothing to be ashamed about, they had a lot of glorious failures,” he added.

In 2001, Archer’s political career ended in disgrace in Britain after he was found guilty of perjury and sentenced to four years in jail. (ANI)

New Zealand climber slams Jeffrey Archer over Everest claim

New Zealand climber slams Jeffrey Archer over Everest claim Wellington – A New Zealand mountaineer has slammed a claim by author Jeffrey Archer in a new book that a British climber conquered Mount Everest years before Sir Edmund Hillary, a newspaper reported Sunday.

Archer’s book, Paths of Glory, is a fictionalized account of the life of George Mallory, who died on Everest in 1924, 29 years before Hillary climbed the world’s tallest peak with Nepali Sherpa Tenzing Norgay.

Hillary, who died last year, remains a national hero in New Zealand, and a report about the book appeared on the front page of the Sunday Star-Times under the headline, “Jeffrey Archer’s Insult to Sir Ed.”

A secondary headline read, “He’s a failed politician and a convicted liar – and now Jeffrey Archer is making the absurd claim that Kiwi icon Sir Edmund Hillary wasn’t the first man to conquer Mount Everest.”

The paper quoted Graeme Dingle, a fellow mountaineer and friend of Sir Ed, as saying, “He’s dreaming. There’s essentially no chance Mallory got to the top.”

Dingle said Archer was reflecting wounded English pride at having been beaten by a colonial: “The English were desperate to get to the top, and they didn’t get there, even in 1953. I think the English are pretty sensitive about it.” (dpa)

Sir Edmund Hillary’s house on sale

Wellington, Feb 28 (ANI): Sir Edmund Hillary’s home of more than 50 years is on the market.

Hillary was the first man to conquer the world’s highest mountain, and his house will be opened to the public for the first time at a charity open home tomorrow.

Sir Ed died in January last year, and his house was built in 1957, reports The NZPA.

The house in Remuera Rd was to be auctioned on March 18 and had a valuation of 1.9 million dollars.

Sir Ed’s daughter Sarah managed the sale.

She told the Weekend Herald there were many beneficiaries to her father’s will and the sale of the house was “something that has to happen. We’re very grateful we have so many wonderful memories from our time here.”

She said the family was sad about selling the house but resigned to it.

During more than 50 years in the house Sir Ed collected mementoes from around the world. (ANI)

China closes Tibetan side of Everest to climbers

Shanghai, Feb.26 (ANI): China has closed the Tibetan side of Mount Everest to climbers as it exerts total control over the region in the run-up to the 50th anniversary of the Dalai Lama’s exile, reports The Telegraph.

The closure of Everest’s northeast ridge came after China told tourist agencies in Tibet to cancel all tours until April and stopped issuing entrance permits for Tibet to foreigners.

Tensions in Tibet are running high ahead of the anniversary of the Dalai Lama’s flight into exile on March 10. Many Tibetans have chosen not to celebrate Tibetan New Year, or Losar.

China’s move to close off Tibet will ensure a news black-out in case of any repeat of the violence that broke out last March.

Reporters in Tibetan areas of the surrounding provinces have already spotted large squads of riot police.

The Dalai Lama told Tibetan exiles that China’s “strike-hard” campaign is now fully in force in Tibet.

Climbers, who prefer the southeastern route through Nepal that was taken by Sir Edmund Hillary, less travel the Tibetan side of Everest, or Mount Chomolungma in Tibetan.(ANI)