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Four bodies and ten tons of rubbish collected from Everest

  (Agence France-Presse)
Namche Bazar, Nepal
Tue, May 28, 2019

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Four bodies and ten tons of rubbish collected from Everest Nepali climbers pose for photographs after collecting waste from the Mount Everest at Namche Bazar, on May 27, 2019, before it is transported to Kathmandu to be recycled. Nepal government sent a dedicated clean-up team to Mount Everest this season with a target to bring back 10,000 kilograms (10 tonnes) of trash in an ambitious plan to clean the world's highest rubbish dump. (AFP/Prakash Mathema)

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our bodies have been retrieved from Everest and some ten tonnes of garbage plucked from the mountain at the end of this year's climbing season, Nepal authorities said Monday.

Global warming means melting glaciers are revealing human remains and rubbish, which has gathered over decades of commercial mountaineering and as an increasing number of big-spending climbers who pay little attention to the ugly footprint they leave behind.

The four bodies were brought down by helicopter last week according to media reports. 

Dandu Raj Ghimire of Nepal's tourism department told AFP they are being identified.

The 14-strong team sent by the government spent about six weeks scouring for litter at base camp and at Camp 4 -- nearly 8,000 metres up -- scraping together empty cans, bottles, plastic and discarded climbing gear.

"We have reached our target this season... we hope we are able to continue what we have started," Ghimire said. 

Army helicopters and porters transported the refuse down to Namche Bazar, the last major town on the route to Mount Everest. 

Authorities said some of it will be sent to Kathmandu for recycling.

Read also: Deaths on crowded Mount Everest: Why is there a jam on the world's highest peak?

Fluorescent tents, discarded climbing equipment, empty gas canisters and even human excrement litter the well-trodden route to the summit of the 8,848-metre (29,029-feet) peak. 

"We need to run this program for few more years, especially at the higher camps, to make the mountain clean," said Pasang Nuru Sherpa, the clean-up team's leader. 

Governments on both sides of the mountain have been battling the human waste and trash left by an increasing number of climbers. 

Six years ago, Nepal implemented a $4,000 rubbish deposit per team that would be refunded if each climber brought down at least eight kilos (18 pounds) of waste, but only half of the climbers return with their trash. 

In February, China banned non-climbers from accessing its Everest base camp in Tibet in an attempt to clean up its side of the mountain. 

Hundreds of climbers reached the summit this season, and the total could go past last year's record of 807 ascents.

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