KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) — Hundreds of people in Nepal's capital held separate rallies to mark the 61st anniversary of the first conquest of Mount Everest and to remember the 16 Sherpa guides who died in an avalanche last month on the world's highest mountain.
Kancha Sherpa, 81, the lone surviving member of the first expedition to conquer Everest, led a rally of 500 people in Katmandu on Thursday, with mountaineers and trekking guides also taking part. New Zealander Edmund Hillary and his Sherpa guide, Tenzing Norgay, became the first climbers to reach the top of Everest on May 29, 1953.
Kancha had carried loads on his back up the mountain for the expedition and went up to the last camp on Everest, but did not climb to the summit.
"We were all very happy on that day. It was the biggest day of my life," Kancha said, recalling the day Hillary and Tenzing reached the top of Everest.
More than 4,200 climbers have scaled Everest since then.
A separate rally was held Wednesday night in memory of the 16 guides killed in an April 18 avalanche just above Everest's base camp. Participants held candles and pictures of those who died in the disaster. "Long live our brave Sherpa brothers," they chanted.
The avalanche swept the Sherpas early in the climbing season, while they were carrying equipment and tents to set up camps.
After the avalanche, the Sherpa guides refused to continue for various reasons, including out of respect for the dead and pressure from family members, causing the climbing season to be canceled.
A Chinese climber, however, returned to Everest and scaled the peak last week. Her claim is being disputed because she apparently used a helicopter from the base camp to Camp 2, and mountaineering authorities say climbers are required to trek from the base camp at 5,300 meters (17,380 feet) to the 8,850-foot (29,035-foot) summit and back to be counted as a successful climb
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