Nepal's
Sherpas have demanded more compensation for the families of local guides killed
in Friday's avalanche on Mount Everest. It was the deadliest accident ever on
the world's highest peak.
Ang
Tshering Sherpa, president of the Nepal Mountaineering Association, said Monday
that Sherpas want the government to offer more compensation and insurance for
guides and their families.
"There
is a situation of conflict up in the mountain. It is serious and could have far
reaching consequences for climbing in Nepal," he said. "So the
government must act on their demands immediately."
Local
guides and support staff held an emergency meeting Sunday in response to the
accident and outlined their demands to the government in a statement released on the group's website.
The guides
have demanded that the government pay the medical bills for the injured and
raise the insurance cover to $20,000 (14,500 euros) from $10,000.
"If
the demands are not met, we will be forced to launch strong protests for the
sake of the daily bread of the entire Sherpa community," the Sherpas said
in the statement, giving a seven day deadline.
Everest
climbers currently pay a fee of $25,000 plus a $4,000 deposit to ensure they return to base camp with their garbage. Sherpas earn $3,000 to $6,000 a season
- about 10 times the average annual pay in Nepal.
The
government has announced an immediate payment of 40,000 rupees ($400, 300
euros) to the victims' families to cover funeral costs, a sum relatives have
called a pittance.
Deadliest
accident on Everest
Climbing on
the mountain has been temporarily halted as search teams continued to dig
through snow and ice for the missing.
The bodies
of at least 13 guides have recovered with three still missing. Another three
guides remain in critical condition with broken limbs, ribs, and other injuries
in Kathmandu hospitals.
The
avalanche swept through the Khumbu Icefall area of the mountain on Friday at an
altitude of 5,800 meters (19,000 feet). The accident underscored the huge risks
faced by Sherpas who maintain and prepare the icy slopes for climbers and trek
the routes carrying equipment for their clients.
Any
expedition cancellations are likely to have an impact on the impoverished
Himalayan country's economy which counts on tourism as a key revenue-earner.
Nepal is home to eight of the world's 14 peaks that surpass 8,000 meters.
Nearly
4,000 people have climbed Mount Everest since 1953, when Sir Edmund Hillary of
New Zealand and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay first scaled the 8,850-meter
(29,035-foot) summit. Since then, more than 300 people have died on the
mountain.
Friday's
avalanche is the worst accident to hit Mount Everest since May 1996, when eight
climbers were killed in one day due to a snow storm near the summit. The
tragedy was immortalized in Jon Krakauer's best-selling book "Into Thin
Air."
hc/ng (Reuters, AFP, AP, dpa)
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