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Nepal to put troops on Everest to block Tibet demos

Nepalese policemen detain a Tibetan protester during an anti-Chinese demonstration in front of the consular section of the Chinese Embassy in Kathmandu on March 30, 2008. Some 113 Tibetans protesters including several monks and nuns were detained after demonstrating in front of the building in the Nepalese capital, police and eyewitnesses said. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Kathmandu (AFP) March 28, 2008
Nepal is to deploy soldiers on its side of Mount Everest to prevent pro-Tibet protests when China carries the Olympic torch to the summit in early May, officials told AFP Friday.

Government sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said video cameras would be banned from the area and foreign climbers would only be allowed near the top of the world's highest peak once the Olympic expedition was clear.

"Four soldiers will stay at Everest base camp while another four will remain at camp two," an official said.

The soldiers will "monitor the activities of expedition teams so that no anti-China protest takes place," the source said.

Nepal officially respects its giant northern neighbour's "One China policy" and accepts Beijing's line that Tibet and Taiwan and indivisible parts of China.

But it is also home to around 20,000 Tibetan exiles, many of whom have been protesting almost daily since unrest broke out in Tibet on March 10, the anniversary of a failed 1959 uprising against Chinese rule of Tibet.

A Chinese team plans to take the torch to the summit of the 8,848-metre (29,028-feet) mountain -- which straddles the border between Nepal and Chinese-controlled Tibet -- in early May.

The northern side of the world's highest peak will be closed off altogether to private expeditions.

On the south side, as well as the video ban and soldiers, no climbers will be able to stay above the second of four camps between May 1-10 while the Chinese team are climbing, the officials said.

Earlier this week, Nepal's Foreign Minister Sahana Pradhan said her country was wary of upsetting its giant northern neighbour.

"The Olympic flame is very important for China and we know we have to do everything to help them have a successful Olympics," she said.

Despite the restrictions, mountaineers expressed relief that the mountain was not being closed off altogether as many had feared.

"We are happy that government finally made a decision," said Ishwori Poudel, an expedition organiser who has 55 foreign clients -- paying tens of thousands of dollars each -- who will try and summit this spring.

"We will start fixing ropes and ladders from Saturday," he said.

Time is quickly running out as tackling Everest requires weeks of preparation by Sherpas who have to lay hundreds of ladders across the Khumbu Icefall -- the dangerous maze of ice just above base camp -- as well as lay out kilometres of rope alone the route.

The main Everest climbing season is in May, when a favourable change in weather conditions creates a window of opportunity of about two weeks.

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Monks defy China crackdown to protest in Lhasa
Beijing (AFP) March 27, 2008
Monks from one of Tibetan Buddhism's most sacred temples defied China's crackdown to protest in front of visiting foreign reporters in Lhasa on Thursday, voicing their support for the Dalai Lama.







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