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 Nepal makes this news on ESPN for deporting a climber
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Posted on 04-29-08 1:51 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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I was surprised to see this news on ESPN front page. hehe!

Nepal clamps down, deports American climber with banner

KATMANDU, Nepal -- Nepal has imposed a near-blackout on communications on its side of Mount Everest, trekking company officials said Tuesday, hours after the government acknowledged it had deported an American mountaineer caught at base camp with a "Free Tibet" banner.

The government has also ordered a BBC news crew from the Everest base camp, the broadcaster reported.

The news comes as Nepal, not wanting to hurt relations with Beijing, tries to enforce a strict ban on protests during China's upcoming Olympic torch relay to the summit of the world's highest mountain. Dozens of armed Nepalese soldiers have been posted at Mount Everest's base camp and at Camp 2, a lower stop for mountaineers.

The border between the two countries cuts across the 29,035-foot summit.

U.S. mountaineer William Brant Holland of Midlothian, Va., was expelled from Nepal for violating regulations, Tourism Ministry official Krishna Gyawali said Tuesday.

Holland, who left Nepal on Monday for home, was found with the banner at the Everest base camp last week and told to leave the mountain. When he arrived in the capital of Katmandu, he was questioned by officials, who ordered him to leave the country for violating a ban on anti-China activities.

He also has been banned from all mountaineering activities in Nepal for the next two years.

Holland was the first climber expelled from the mountain to prevent protests during the planned torch relay by Chinese climbers to the Everest summit ahead of the Beijing Olympics.

The relay, expected to start soon, will take place on the Chinese side of the mountain. But Nepal's government, under pressure from Beijing, has posted soldiers on its side and banned climbing near the summit from May 1-10.

Police and soldiers have been ordered to stop protests on the mountain using whatever means necessary, including weapons, although the use of deadly force is authorized only as a last resort.

A British Broadcasting Corp. team, meanwhile, was told Monday by Nepalese officials to leave the Everest base camp. A report on the BBC's Web site said they were "politely but firmly" told to leave.

Only climbers with permits to climb Everest are allowed to stay in the base camp area.

Soldiers and officials have also banned the use of satellite phones and radios on the mountain, and have forbidden photography at higher elevations, according to the BBC and trekking company employees in Katmandu. The trekking company employees spoke on condition of anonymity because they didn't want to alienate government officials.

Climbers are allowed occasional use of e-mail, but only under the supervision of authorities, the employees said.

Government officials declined to comment on communications restrictions.

Climbers will not be allowed to go past Everest's Camp 2 -- at 21,325 feet -- until after the Chinese finish their torch run, which is expected to take place in May. The harsh weather on Everest usually allows only two brief windows, normally lasting anywhere from a couple of days to a week, when conditions are favorable enough for a push to the summit.

There are already dozens of mountaineers on Everest for the popular spring climbing season. Climbers spend weeks acclimatizing before attempting the summit. There are even more people on Nepal's southern section of the mountain this season because the Chinese side is completely off-limits to foreign climbers.

The threat of protests on Everest comes from the thousands of Tibetan exiles who have been living in Nepal for years. They have been holding almost daily anti-China protests in front of the United Nations office and the Chinese Embassy in Katmandu.

Police broke up yet another of their protests Tuesday outside the Chinese Embassy's visa office, detaining 130 people.

They chanted "Free Tibet," "China is killer" and "China is lying" as they were taken away by policemen in vans and trucks.

The U.N. and international rights groups have criticized Nepal for using what they say is excessive force in stopping the demonstrations. Police have beaten protesters with batons and dragged them through the streets while detaining them.

Source: ESPN


 


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