KATHMANDU: Nepal on Tuesday banned an Indian couple from mountain climbing in the country for 10 years after they tried to fake a successful ascent of Mount Everest with digitally altered photographs, officials said.
Police constables Tarakeshwari and Dinesh Rathod were among hundreds of
climbers who attempted the 8,850 metre (29,035 feet) summit this climbing season, a year after the peak was closed following the death of 18
climbers in an avalanche triggered by an earthquake.
Tourism Department official Gyanendra Shrestha said a government investigation had confirmed complaints by other
climbers that the
Indian couple had doctored photographs to show themselves at the top of the world's highest mountain.
"We have revoked their climbing certificate," Shrestha told Reuters. "They will **t be allowed to do any climbing activity in
Nepal for 10 years."
Tourism officials said that analysis of
photos submitted by the couple showed they had superimposed their faces and the
Indian flag on pictures taken by a**ther climber who had climbed
Everest a few days earlier than they claimed to have done so.
They held a news conference in the capital, Kathmandu, on June 5 to say they had reached the peak of
Everest on May 23.
The Rathods, who serve in the police force in Pune, could **t immediately be reached for comment. The city's commissioner of police, Rashmi Shukla, said an inquiry had been opened into apparent discrepancies in their
Everest account.
"We are waiting for information
from the Nepali side," Shukla told Reuters.
Nepal is home to eight of the world's 14 highest peaks. The $11,000 permit fee paid by
climbers is a key source of income for the cash-strapped country, in addition to outlays for logistics, sherpa guides and gear that support its eco**my.
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