China cancels Everest climbs over fears of importing coronavirus from Nepal - Action News
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China cancels Everest climbs over fears of importing coronavirus from Nepal

China has cancelled attempts to climb Mount Everest from its side of the world's highest peak because of fears of importing COVID-19 cases from neighbouring Nepal, state media reported.

While China has mostly curbed domestic transmission, Nepal seeing surge in cases

Tents of mountaineers are pictured at the Everest base camp in the Mount Everest region of Solukhumbu district in eastern Nepal on May 3. China is calling off Everest climbs from its side of the mountain over fears of importing COVID-19 cases from Nepal. (Prakash Mathema/AFP/Getty Images)

China has cancelled attempts to climb Mount Everest from its side of the world's highest peak because of fears of importing COVID-19 cases from neighbouring Nepal, state media reported.

The closure was confirmed in a notice on Friday from China's General Administration of Sport, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

The move reflects the abundance of caution China has taken in dealing with the pandemic. While China has mostly curbed domestic transmission of the coronavirus, Nepal is experiencing a surge, with record numbers of new infections and deaths.

China had issued permits to 38 people, all Chinese citizens, to climb the 8,849-metre-high mountain this spring. Nepal has given permission to 408 people. Climbing was not allowed from either side last year because of the pandemic.

In Nepal, several climbers have reported testing positive for COVID-19 after they were brought down from the Everest base camp.

China had planned separation line

The month of May usually has the best weather for climbing Everest. Scores have reached the summit this week, and more are expected to make attempts later this month once the weather improves. Two climbers have died on the Nepalese side, one Swiss and one American.

China earlier said it would set up a separation line at the peak and prohibit people on its side from coming into contact with anyone on the Nepalese side. It was unclear how that would be done.

An expert climbing guide, Lukas Furtenbach of Austria, said he was calling off his current Everest attempt with a team of more than a dozen climbers from the Nepalese side because of virus fears.

"We ended our expedition today because of safety concerns with the given COVID outbreak," Furtenbach said in a message from base camp. "We don't want [to]send people or sherpas up, they [could]get sick high up there and die."

Before leaving for the mountain, he had warned that the virus could spread among the hundreds of other climbers, guides and helpers who are now camped on the base of Everest if all of them are not checked immediately and safety measures aren't taken.