4,000 kg nonsense from Mount Everest brought to Kathmandu

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Remaining 3,000 kg waste at Mt Everest base camp shall be brought down by June 3 Kathmandu, May 26 Four-thousand kilograms of nonsense
gathered from Mt Everest was brought to Kathmandu under ‘Clean mountain campaign.&Three-thousand kilograms of nonsense still remained at
the mountain site, according to the Nepali Army. The nonsense was gathered in collaboration with the NA, Nepal Tourism Board, Mountaineering
Association of Nepal and Khumbhu Pashang Lhamu Rural Municipality. Remaining nonsense would be brought to Kathmandu within June 3, according
to NA. According to the NA spokesperson largeyan Dev Pandey, the NA followed the command and directives of CoAS Thapa, which stated that the
NA shall work for cleaning the mountain
This is the first time that the NA took initiatives to clean the tallest mountain of the world, according to Pandey. The NA shall
participate at a program in Lukla to mark the ‘Sagarmatha Day&, tomorrow. Twelve Sherpas helped to gather the nonsense above the base
camp,& said Pandey, adding that the Sherpas gathered nonsense from different camps of Mt
Everest. The Nepali Army first carried the nonsense gathered from Mt Everest to Gorakshep, located inside the Sagarmatha National Park, by a
helicopter. Also a helicopter was used to airlift the nonsense from Gorakshep to Okhalghunga
It employed vehicles as well as a helicopter to carry the nonsense from Okhaldhunga to Kathmandu, according to Pandey. The NA has stored
3,000 kg nonsense on its office premises at the Tribhuvan International Airport. It handed over 1,000 kg nonsense to Blue Waste to Worth
(BW2V), a social enterprise committed to creating value from the mountain waste. Pandey, said that NA shall hand over the remaining nonsense
to BW2V on June 5, on the occasion of ‘Environment Day&. He said that after completing the Mt Everest clean-up campaign, the NA shall
continue its cleaning drive in other mountains of the country, on a precedence basis. The post 4,000 kg nonsense from Mount Everest brought
to Kathmandu seemed first on The Himalayan Times.