
UK minister Al Carns brushes off Nepali investigation into speedy Everest climb
A British defence minister has dismissed claims that he is being investigated by the Nepali government for his use of xenon gas to speed up his ascent of Mount Everest. Al Carns, a Royal Marines reservist, reached the summit of Everest in five days with a group of former British special forces soldiers on Wednesday. The ascent usually takes two months because climbers stop for long periods to acclimatise to the high altitude. However, Mr Carns said he and his group were aided by xenon gas, which prevents altitude sickness. While the achievement impressed many climbers, it was criticised by the Nepali government who said they were investigating. Department of Tourism director Himal Gautam, who oversees mountaineering expeditions, said on Thursday that it had not been informed of the gas use. 'We have launched an investigation into the matter,' he told the Kathmandu Post. He added that all climbers and operators must declare the equipment, medications and substances used during expeditions. Mr Carns denied he was under investigation by the Nepali government, telling The Telegraph that he and his climbing group had inhaled the xenon in Germany weeks before arriving in Nepal. He believed the controversy was triggered by rumours that the climbers had used the gas during the ascent. He said this issue had been cleared with the Ministry of Tourism. 'There's no way I'm under investigation,' he said. He told BirminghamLive that the trail to the summit was strewn with the dead bodies of climbers. 'It brought it home, this was the death zone,' he said. Lukas Furtenbach, founder of Furtenbach Adventures which organised the climb, told The National he had not been contacted by the Nepali government about an investigation. 'There was no breach of any Nepali regulation. What happens outside Nepal should not be under the purview of the Nepal government,' he said. The gas was banned for athletes by the Worldwide Anti-Doping Agency in 2014, but this does not apply to mountaineers. The International Climbing and Mountaineering Federation warned against the use of xenon when the expedition was announced in January. 'There is no evidence that breathing in xenon improves performance in the mountains, and inappropriate use can be dangerous,' it wrote in a statement. "Acclimatisation to altitude is a complex process that affects the various organs/systems such as the brain, lungs, heart, kidneys and blood to different degrees, and is not fully understood," the statement said, adding that the drug was "rarely" used in medicine. Mr Furtenbach said other gases, such as oxygen and asthma sprays, were also banned by the anti-doping agency but were critical to Mount Everest expeditions. 'If the government is considering banning xenon, also all other medical aids like oxygen or altitude medicine must be banned. This is obviously not possible,' he said. Nepali officials have also raised concerns about the impact on tourism if the drug becomes widely used. 'Traditional expeditions employ Sherpas, porters, guides and kitchen staff for weeks, sometimes months,' Dambar Parajuli, president of the Expedition Operators Association of Nepal, told The Kathmandu Post. 'If climbers finish their journey in days, the ripple effect on local employment will be devastating.' Mr Furtenbach believes widespread use of xenon could make climbing safer and reduce the environmental damage that the popular expeditions are causing to Mount Everest. 'A shorter expedition also means less garbage, less resources, less human waste in this sensitive environment,' he said. He added that Nepali guides involved in his tours would not see a reduction in salary or jobs. 'We pay them for three months in the season, even when our clients are here only for one week,' he said.
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Khaleej Times
29-05-2025
- Khaleej Times
Look: Nepal supporters of former king demand restoration of monarchy
Thousands of supporters of Nepal's former king rallied in the capital Kathmandu on Thursday, calling for the restoration of the constitutional monarchy that was abolished 17 years ago, amid rising unhappiness with successive elected governments. Flag-waving protesters marched into the city centre from different directions shouting: 'Our king is dearer than lives ... king come back and save the country,' as riot police stood guard but did not intervene. At a similar rally in March, two people were killed and several injured. The 239-year-old monarchy was voted out in 2008 following weeks of bloody street protests. The last king of the Himalayan nation, 77-year-old Gyanendra, has lived with his family in a private house in Kathmandu as a commoner since being toppled. He has not commented on Thursday's demonstration but expressed sorrow at the violence that killed two people in March. Demonstrators are also calling for the country of 30 million people, wedged between China and India, to become a Hindu state again, a status it lost with the monarchy. 'Governments formed in the last 17 years have failed to deliver on their promises of development, creation of jobs and improvement of the living conditions of people,' said 35-year-old street vendor Rajendra Tamang. 'Thousands of young people are forced to leave the country in search of work as they see no hope here,' he said. Millions of young Nepalis are working in the Middle East, South Korea and Malaysia, mainly at construction sites, and the money they send home is a key source of income for Nepal. Supporters of the government staged a separate but smaller rally nearby in support of the republican system that replaced the monarchy. The three major political parties that jointly control nearly 200 of the 275 seats in parliament say the monarchy was consigned to history and cannot be restored. All three jointly campaigned against the monarchy and voted it out in 2008 and say their faith in the republican system was unshakeable. The Rastriya Prajatantra Party, which is campaigning for the monarchy, holds only 13 seats in parliament. A two-thirds majority or 184 lawmakers is needed to change the constitution, which was adopted in 2015, turning Nepal into a federal democratic republic. The royalists say their protests will continue until the monarchy is restored.


The National
23-05-2025
- The National
UK minister Al Carns brushes off Nepali investigation into speedy Everest climb
A British defence minister has dismissed claims that he is being investigated by the Nepali government for his use of xenon gas to speed up his ascent of Mount Everest. Al Carns, a Royal Marines reservist, reached the summit of Everest in five days with a group of former British special forces soldiers on Wednesday. The ascent usually takes two months because climbers stop for long periods to acclimatise to the high altitude. However, Mr Carns said he and his group were aided by xenon gas, which prevents altitude sickness. While the achievement impressed many climbers, it was criticised by the Nepali government who said they were investigating. Department of Tourism director Himal Gautam, who oversees mountaineering expeditions, said on Thursday that it had not been informed of the gas use. 'We have launched an investigation into the matter,' he told the Kathmandu Post. He added that all climbers and operators must declare the equipment, medications and substances used during expeditions. Mr Carns denied he was under investigation by the Nepali government, telling The Telegraph that he and his climbing group had inhaled the xenon in Germany weeks before arriving in Nepal. He believed the controversy was triggered by rumours that the climbers had used the gas during the ascent. He said this issue had been cleared with the Ministry of Tourism. 'There's no way I'm under investigation,' he said. He told BirminghamLive that the trail to the summit was strewn with the dead bodies of climbers. 'It brought it home, this was the death zone,' he said. Lukas Furtenbach, founder of Furtenbach Adventures which organised the climb, told The National he had not been contacted by the Nepali government about an investigation. 'There was no breach of any Nepali regulation. What happens outside Nepal should not be under the purview of the Nepal government,' he said. The gas was banned for athletes by the Worldwide Anti-Doping Agency in 2014, but this does not apply to mountaineers. The International Climbing and Mountaineering Federation warned against the use of xenon when the expedition was announced in January. 'There is no evidence that breathing in xenon improves performance in the mountains, and inappropriate use can be dangerous,' it wrote in a statement. "Acclimatisation to altitude is a complex process that affects the various organs/systems such as the brain, lungs, heart, kidneys and blood to different degrees, and is not fully understood," the statement said, adding that the drug was "rarely" used in medicine. Mr Furtenbach said other gases, such as oxygen and asthma sprays, were also banned by the anti-doping agency but were critical to Mount Everest expeditions. 'If the government is considering banning xenon, also all other medical aids like oxygen or altitude medicine must be banned. This is obviously not possible,' he said. Nepali officials have also raised concerns about the impact on tourism if the drug becomes widely used. 'Traditional expeditions employ Sherpas, porters, guides and kitchen staff for weeks, sometimes months,' Dambar Parajuli, president of the Expedition Operators Association of Nepal, told The Kathmandu Post. 'If climbers finish their journey in days, the ripple effect on local employment will be devastating.' Mr Furtenbach believes widespread use of xenon could make climbing safer and reduce the environmental damage that the popular expeditions are causing to Mount Everest. 'A shorter expedition also means less garbage, less resources, less human waste in this sensitive environment,' he said. He added that Nepali guides involved in his tours would not see a reduction in salary or jobs. 'We pay them for three months in the season, even when our clients are here only for one week,' he said.


Gulf Today
31-03-2025
- Gulf Today
‘A Working Man' is exactly what you expect from Jason
Jason Statham is cosplaying a construction labourer when 'A Working Man' begins. He's making sure the rebar is spaced correctly and the concrete is correctly mixed. But we all know where his real strengths are: Beating up people, ferociously. Soon enough — faster than this one-time springboard diving champion used to hit the water — Statham will be doing what he does best in an action movie made by millionaires that hopes to tap into blue-collar chic. Statham plays a sort of hero-laying-low in director and co-writer David Ayer's latest collab — they previously teamed up on 'The Beekeeper' — with the addition of a co-writer who knows a thing or two about lone-wolf underdogs — Sylvester Stallone. When the 19-year-old daughter of his boss is snatched during a night out with girlfriends in Chicago, they turn to Statham, a former anti-terrorist commando for the UK's Royal Marines, which at least explains the British accent. But he can't help them he's given up that old life. 'I'm a different person now,' he says. It's not who I am anymore.' Admittedly, he says this shortly after fighting off a gang messing with one of his workers, attacking them with a bucket of nails. an ax and a bag of gravel. He's a widower and a single father saving up money to fight — legally this time for more custody by sleeping in his Ram truck. His in-laws want to limit his visitation, alleging he suffers from PTSD, a very cynical use by the movie-makers of a popcorn flick with a body count north of a hundred. 'I hurt, too,' he tells his daughter. A visit to an old military buddy - David Harbour, superb — helps change his mind. 'God help them,' says Harbour's character after the decision is made. He knows what's in store for anyone getting in the way of Statham's oddly named Levon Cade (scramble the letters and you get 'Novel Aced,' go figure). So begins Statham's version of 'Taken' mixed with a blue-collar version of 'John Wick.' Our construction worker-turned-vigilante is reassuring to the family of the missing teen. 'I'm gonna bring her home. I promise,' he vows. We soon plunge into an underworld of Russian mobsters, designer drugs, human trafficking, corrupt cops and a vicious biker gang run by a guy who sits on a throne of motorcycle parts. People are waterboarded, shot, stabbed, smashed with animal skulls, blown up by grenades and burned with hot coffee. 'All of this is for a girl?' asks one incredulous Russian mob boss, who is hogtied and dangled over his own swimming pool as Statham tortures him while munching on some toast he's made in his fancy kitchen. Shall we talk about the rich now? The upper-level mobsters wear cravats, bow ties and hold gold-tipped walking sticks. One even wears a cape and uses a cigarette holder, like a sort of Mister Burns from 'The Simpsons.' The drug dealers wear buffoonish designer duds, 'do business' in restaurant banquets and all have attache cases with stacks of banded money, like it's still the '80s. They are all venal, foppish and perverted. The big finale takes place in a tucked-away farm casino with fancy-dressed fat cats. This is in contrast to Statham, an orange safety vest kind of guy with a soldier's moral compass. He at one point throws into the air enough $100 bills to buy a Lamborghini. But he's not doing it the money, even though he needs it. He's there for the girl. 'A Working Man' fetishizes its blue-collar ethic at a time when extremely wealthy Americans have taken key roles in the second Donald Trump administration and the world's richest man, Elon Musk, is slicing at government jobs (Veterans are increasingly facing the burden. ) Trump himself donned an orange vest when he cosplayed a garbage man on the campaign trail. Everyone loves the working class these days. Anyway, we're not here for a lesson, we're here for some ultra-violence. 'A Working Man' does it well, especially a struggle in the confined space of a moving van. The plot gets a little stretched over two hours - including a ludicrous motorcycle chase scene when enough bullets are fired at Statham as were expended in the Battle of Fallujah — but a bright moment is having the snatched teen (a very good Arianna Rivas, someone to watch) step into her own power. Associated Press