India, Nepal discuss ways to take forward bilateral ties, development cooperation
EAM Jaishankar met Khanal to review bilateral ties, including development cooperation, connectivity, trade and transit, energy and people-to-people ties.
"NEPAL" · 총 109건
필터 보기현재 지수
50.3
0 = 부정 우세
50 = 중립
100 = 긍정 우세
최근 7일 기준 81,270건을 분석한 결과, 뉴스 심리지수는 50.2(균형)입니다. 긍정 3,976건(4.9%)·중립 75,379건(92.8%)·부정 1,915건(2.4%)이며, 중립 비중이 뚜렷하게 높습니다. 성향 지수는 종합 14.6(중도 균형)입니다.
EAM Jaishankar met Khanal to review bilateral ties, including development cooperation, connectivity, trade and transit, energy and people-to-people ties.
S Jaishankar described the talks as detailed and substantive
Nepal wants to pursue “result-driven diplomacy” with India, its “most important partner”, says Nepal FM; “strong complementarities” between the current governments in Delhi, Kathmandu, says EAM
India and Nepal are poised to significantly enhance their "very special relationship," with discussions focusing on expanding cooperation in energy, digital technology, and new sectors. Both nations emphasized their civilizational ties and a shared resolve for a transformative partnership, aiming to unlock its full potential amidst ongoing collaboration and mutual support.
In India heeft de leider van de piepjonge en razendpopulaire Kakkerlakken-beweging voor het eerst een protest aangevoerd tegen de regering. Oprichter Abhijeet Dipke (30) kwam vanochtend vanuit de Verenigde Staten aan in de hoofdstad New Delhi. Hij voegde zich meteen bij de betogende menigte. "Kakkerlakken zijn niet bang en ze gaan ook niet dood", riep hij aanhangers toe. Aanhangers van de beweging, die tot vandaag vooral online actief was, demonstreren tegen de corruptie in India. Aanleiding is een grote fraudezaak rond het toelatingsexamen voor medische opleidingen. De beweging stelde daarom een ultimatum voor het vertrek van de minister van Onderwijs. Die heeft dat laten passeren. Inmiddels zijn nieuwe protesten aangekondigd. Met dit eerste grote protest wil de Kakkerlakken-beweging vooral laten zien dat ze de aantallen hebben om serieuze druk uit te oefenen op de Indiase regering. In enkele dagen trok de beweging op Instagram zo'n 22 miljoen volgers. Van het internet naar de straat Sarthak Bagchi promoveert aan de Universiteit Leiden op Indiase politiek en noemt de Kakkerlakken nu meer een online fenomeen dan een beweging. "Maar het is ze in ieder geval al gelukt om een persconferentie te geven in de aanloop naar dit protest. Dat is iets wat de premier van dit land nog nooit heeft gedaan." Abhijeet Dipke was er vooraf zeker van dat hij opgepakt zou worden zodra hij voet op Indiase grond zou zetten. Dat gebeurde niet. Hij werd wel opgewacht, maar kreeg van agenten in burgerkleding te horen dat hij zijn protest in het centrum van New Delhi kon doorgaan. Met in de hand een biografie van Bhimrao Ambedkar, de ontwerper van Indiase grondwet, stapte hij vervolgens het vliegveld uit. 'Bedreiging nationale veiligheid' Online heeft Dipke nu met zijn satirische beweging meer dan twee keer zoveel volgers als regeringspartij BJP. Bij de Indiase regering leidt de populariteit tot onrust. Platform X is gesommeerd het profiel van de beweging te blokkeren. Die zou een bedreiging zijn voor de nationale veiligheid. "Ze begrijpen de kracht die studentenprotesten kunnen hebben als ze echte klachten die onder de bevolking leven vertegenwoordigen", zegt Bagchi. Rond het protest van vandaag was de sfeer gespannen. Dipke wil laten zien dat zijn online satire sterk genoeg is om mensen te motiveren fysiek de straat op te gaan. De Indiase overheid daarentegen wil voorkomen dat de vonk die online begonnen is niet uitgroeit tot een vurige Gen-Z beweging, zoals in buurlanden Bangladesh en Nepal. Daar leidden protesten uiteindelijk tot de val van de regering. Dipke studeert aan een universiteit in Boston en werkte eerder als communicatiestrateeg voor de Aam Aadmi Partij. Die komt ook voort uit een anti-corruptiebeweging en groeide uit tot een politiek alternatief voor traditionele partijen. Hij weet dus hoe je jongeren online mobiliseert, maar de impact die hij met één bericht heeft gehad, kon hij ook niet voorspellen. Vanuit Boston reageerde Dipke halverwege mei met een bericht op sociale media op een uitspraak van het Indiase hooggerechtshof. Daarin noemde de rechter jongeren zonder opleiding of baan die zich bezighouden met activisme of journalistiek kakkerlakken en parasieten. "Het is zorgelijk dat een rechter op deze manier Indiase burgers ontmenselijkt met deze taal waarvan we historisch weten dat het veel schade kan aanrichten", zegt Bagchi. Dipke draaide in zijn bericht de negatieve lading ervan om en vroeg zich af wat er gebeurt als de kakkerlakken samenkomen. Zo ontstond de satirische Cockroach Janta Party. De toevoeging Janta Party, of JP (Volkspartij), is een knipoog naar de regerende BJP. De satirische beweging speelt zo in op de onvrede die er onder jongeren leeft over het gebrek aan banen en opleidingsplekken in India. Grote eisen Een voorbeeld daarvan is de toelatingstest voor medische opleidingen. Omdat er maar enkele duizenden plekken beschikbaar zijn, hangt voor de ruim twee miljoen studenten heel veel af van deze test, waarvoor ze soms maanden dag en nacht leren. Maar dit jaar werd de uitslag nietig verklaard omdat er gefraudeerd zou zijn. Bij enkele studenten kwam de klap dat hun harde werk voor niets is geweest zo hard aan, dat ze kozen voor zelfdoding. De Kakkerlakken-beweging vraagt daarom om het vertrek van minister van Onderwijs. Het lijkt vooralsnog de meest haalbare van de punten die de beweging tot nu toe geformuleerd heeft. Want voor grote aanpassingen in de Indiase media, of nieuwe wetgeving rondom banen van oud-rechters, heeft deze beweging nog niet genoeg politieke druk. Als het protest van vandaag uitgroeit tot een echte beweging, kan dat wel veranderen.
The high-profile engagement marks the first official bilateral visit by a minister from the new Nepali government led by Prime Minister Balen Shah
KATHMANDU, June 6 — A Nepali mountaineer who survived nearly a week on Mount Everest said he “chewed ice&rdq...
A Nepali mountaineer who survived nearly a week on Mount Everest said he “chewed ice” to stay alive, as he recovered in a hospital after a miraculous rescue that stunned the climbing community. Dawa Sherpa, 57, disappeared in brutal conditions on the upper slopes of the world’s tallest mountain on May 30 during one of the final climbs of the spring season. With few climbers still on the peak and his oxygen exhausted, relatives had given up hope and begun ritual mourning prayers, believing he had died on the mountain. “I didn’t think I would be alive,” he told BBC Nepali on Friday from his hospital bed. “I thought I would perish this way. I didn’t get lost. As the oxygen ran out, I fell behind. After the oxygen finished, I couldn’t walk.” Left stranded in freezing temperatures near Everest’s “death zone”, where oxygen levels are critically low, Dawa Sherpa said he survived for days with almost no food or water. “I didn’t eat anything for the first two days. Then I began chewing ice. It hurt my teeth. I chewed the ice hard,” he said. He survived on a few chocolates and snacks he found in his pockets. “I soaked them in water and had them,” he said. Dawa Sherpa, also known as “Hillary” after legendary climber Edmund Hillary, had told others after his rescue that at one point he fell into a crevasse before managing to climb out. Jubilation and anger “Stepping on the snow, I stood up and looked above … It felt I could get out from there,” he said. “I then looked for ropes and found one. Then I held on to it and walked … eventually I came down.” He said he walked day and night towards base camp until finally encountering people almost a week later. He was found crawling towards the base camp on the morning of June 4 by the Sagarmatha Pollution Control Committee (SPCC), a Nepali team that helps set routes on Everest and clean up waste left behind. “Boys from SPCC were going up to collect the waste. I met them. They carried me down.” He was flown to Kathmandu for treatment for frostbite, severe dehydration and a fractured thigh bone, doctors said. “He is doing well. We had a chat,” his daughter Mendo Lhamu Sherpa told AFP. His survival has sparked celebration among fellow climbers, but also anger from family members who accused rescue teams of failing to locate him sooner. Nepal Mountaineering Association president Fur Gelje Sherpa called the survival extraordinary but said the incident highlighted serious concerns over climber safety. “It is irresponsible and inhumane to leave a person behind,” he said. “I believe that an investigation committee must be formed to hold the responsible people accountable for this.” Everest guide Rinji Sherpa, who comes from the same village as Dawa Sherpa, said the climber was highly experienced and familiar with the dangers of high-altitude mountaineering. “He is very lucky, he has had several close calls before but he has survived,” he said. At least five climbers — two Indians and three Nepalis — died during this year’s Everest season. More than 1,000 climbers reached Everest’s summit this season, according to preliminary Nepali government figures, making it the busiest season on record.
A Nepali mountaineer who survived nearly a week on Mount Everest said he “chewed ice” to stay alive, as he recovered in a hospital after a miraculous rescue that stunned the climbing community. Dawa Sherpa, 57, disappeared in brutal conditions on the upper slopes of the world’s tallest mountain on May 30 during one of the final climbs of the spring season. With few climbers still on the peak and his oxygen exhausted, relatives had given up hope and begun ritual mourning prayers, believing he had died on the mountain. “I didn’t think I would be alive,” he told BBC Nepali on Friday from his hospital bed. “I thought I would perish this way. I didn’t get lost. As the oxygen ran out, I fell behind. After the oxygen finished, I couldn’t walk.” Left stranded in freezing temperatures near Everest’s “death zone”, where oxygen levels are critically low, Dawa Sherpa said he survived for days with almost no food or water. “I didn’t eat anything for the first two days. Then I began chewing ice. It hurt my teeth. I chewed the ice hard,” he said. He survived on a few chocolates and snacks he found in his pockets. “I soaked them in water and had them,” he said. Dawa Sherpa, also known as “Hillary” after legendary climber Edmund Hillary, had told others after his rescue that at one point he fell into a crevasse before managing to climb out. Jubilation and anger “Stepping on the snow, I stood up and looked above … It felt I could get out from there,” he said. “I then looked for ropes and found one. Then I held on to it and walked … eventually I came down.” He said he walked day and night towards base camp until finally encountering people almost a week later. He was found crawling towards the base camp on the morning of June 4 by the Sagarmatha Pollution Control Committee (SPCC), a Nepali team that helps set routes on Everest and clean up waste left behind. “Boys from SPCC were going up to collect the waste. I met them. They carried me down.” He was flown to Kathmandu for treatment for frostbite, severe dehydration and a fractured thigh bone, doctors said. “He is doing well. We had a chat,” his daughter Mendo Lhamu Sherpa told AFP. His survival has sparked celebration among fellow climbers, but also anger from family members who accused rescue teams of failing to locate him sooner. Nepal Mountaineering Association president Fur Gelje Sherpa called the survival extraordinary but said the incident highlighted serious concerns over climber safety. “It is irresponsible and inhumane to leave a person behind,” he said. “I believe that an investigation committee must be formed to hold the responsible people accountable for this.” Everest guide Rinji Sherpa, who comes from the same village as Dawa Sherpa, said the climber was highly experienced and familiar with the dangers of high-altitude mountaineering. “He is very lucky, he has had several close calls before but he has survived,” he said. At least five climbers — two Indians and three Nepalis — died during this year’s Everest season. More than 1,000 climbers reached Everest’s summit this season, according to preliminary Nepali government figures, making it the busiest season on record.
Paramedics transport Dawa Sherpa, who was missing for several days in the Everest region, from the helipad at Hams Hospital in Kathmandu, Nepal, June 4, 2026. — Reuters A Nepali mountaineer who survived nearly a week on Mount Everest said he "chewed ice" to stay alive, as he...
It had been feared Dawa Sherpa had perished on the mountain, with his family in Nepal's capital Kathmandu beginning last rites before he was spotted by a clean-up team.
First Nepal Minister to visit India since Balen Shah government took charge in March; expansive agenda for talks includes development cooperation, people-to-people ties, trade and investment
Nepal's Kushal Bhurtel is on a record-breaking spree at the Asian Games qualifiers, smashing back-to-back T20I centuries. Days after hitting six sixes in an over, he delivered another stunning century, powering Nepal to a massive win. This remarkable feat places him in an elite group of cricketers with consecutive T20I hundreds.
The family of a Nepali climber who dragged himself off Mount Everest six days after being abandoned called for an investigation into rescue efforts, as doctors said on Friday he is in a stable condition and recovering in hospital. Mountaineer Dawa Sherpa, 57, vanished in bitter conditions on the upper reaches of the world’s highest mountain early on May 30. His family thought he was dead and had even begun ritual mourning prayers. He was found crawling towards Base Camp on Thursday morning by the Sagarmatha Pollution Control Committee (SPCC), a Nepali team that helps set routes on Everest and clean up waste left behind. Dawa Sherpa, also known as “Hillary” after the famed climber Edmund Hillary, was flown to the capital Kathmandu, where he is being treated for frostbite on his fingers, a fractured thigh bone and severe dehydration, doctors said. “His clinical condition remains stable, and his dehydration is showing significant improvement,” said Jyotindra Sharma, director of the HAMS Hospital in Kathmandu. He said Dawa Sherpa had survived “extremely challenging conditions” on Everest. “He will remain in the [intensive care unit] for a few more days for ongoing care and observation,” Sharma said in a statement. His remarkable survival was greeted with jubilation by his family, who also said they were angry at what they described as the failure of rescue teams to locate him earlier. His wife, Damu Sherpa, told AFP of her joy when she was sent a photograph as he was flown to the capital. “I do not remember how this week went — we thought he was no more, and had already begun his last rites,” she said as she waited to meet him outside the hospital’s ICU. “I was so surprised when I saw the photos and recognised him — he was still wearing a cap I knitted for him.” ‘Angry’ The climb was one of the last of the season, meaning that there were few other mountaineers on the peak. His wife accused the expedition company of failing to deploy search teams in time. “There should be some investigation against the company — they delayed search and rescue for him,” she said. Karma Gyalje Sherpa, a relative who is also an Everest guide, questioned whether more action would have been taken sooner if a high-paying foreigner had been lost on the icy peak. “It is a miracle that he survived in that environment, without eating properly for six days,” he told AFP while waiting at the hospital. “The situation does make me feel angry,” he said. “We don’t know, but if he were a foreigner, maybe the response would be different?” Everest guide Rinji Sherpa, from the same village as Dawa Sherpa, said he was a man who knew the dangers of the mountains well and would do all he could to support his clients. “He is very loyal to his clients, and diligent with making sure he performs his responsibility,” he said. “He is very lucky, he has had several close calls before — but he has survived.” At least five people have died this season — two Indians and three Nepali climbers — on Everest expeditions. More than 1,000 climbers reached the summit of Everest this season, according to initial tallies by Nepali officials, making it the busiest on record.
The family of a Nepali climber who dragged himself off Mount Everest six days after being abandoned called for an investigation into rescue efforts, as doctors said on Friday he is in a stable condition and recovering in hospital. Mountaineer Dawa Sherpa, 57, vanished in bitter conditions on the upper reaches of the world’s highest mountain early on May 30. His family thought he was dead and had even begun ritual mourning prayers. He was found crawling towards Base Camp on Thursday morning by the Sagarmatha Pollution Control Committee (SPCC), a Nepali team that helps set routes on Everest and clean up waste left behind. Dawa Sherpa, also known as “Hillary” after the famed climber Edmund Hillary, was flown to the capital Kathmandu, where he is being treated for frostbite on his fingers, a fractured thigh bone and severe dehydration, doctors said. “His clinical condition remains stable, and his dehydration is showing significant improvement,” said Jyotindra Sharma, director of the HAMS Hospital in Kathmandu. He said Dawa Sherpa had survived “extremely challenging conditions” on Everest. “He will remain in the [intensive care unit] for a few more days for ongoing care and observation,” Sharma said in a statement. His remarkable survival was greeted with jubilation by his family, who also said they were angry at what they described as the failure of rescue teams to locate him earlier. His wife, Damu Sherpa, told AFP of her joy when she was sent a photograph as he was flown to the capital. “I do not remember how this week went — we thought he was no more, and had already begun his last rites,” she said as she waited to meet him outside the hospital’s ICU. “I was so surprised when I saw the photos and recognised him — he was still wearing a cap I knitted for him.” ‘Angry’ The climb was one of the last of the season, meaning that there were few other mountaineers on the peak. His wife accused the expedition company of failing to deploy search teams in time. “There should be some investigation against the company — they delayed search and rescue for him,” she said. Karma Gyalje Sherpa, a relative who is also an Everest guide, questioned whether more action would have been taken sooner if a high-paying foreigner had been lost on the icy peak. “It is a miracle that he survived in that environment, without eating properly for six days,” he told AFP while waiting at the hospital. “The situation does make me feel angry,” he said. “We don’t know, but if he were a foreigner, maybe the response would be different?” Everest guide Rinji Sherpa, from the same village as Dawa Sherpa, said he was a man who knew the dangers of the mountains well and would do all he could to support his clients. “He is very loyal to his clients, and diligent with making sure he performs his responsibility,” he said. “He is very lucky, he has had several close calls before — but he has survived.” At least five people have died this season — two Indians and three Nepali climbers — on Everest expeditions. More than 1,000 climbers reached the summit of Everest this season, according to initial tallies by Nepali officials, making it the busiest on record.
Paramedics transport Dawa Sherpa, who was missing for several days in the Everest region, from the helipad at HAMS Hospital in Kathmandu, Nepal, June 4, 2026.— Reuters/File The family of a Nepali climber who dragged himself off Mount Everest six days after being abandoned called for...
Socorristas e equipes de resgate carregam o alpinista Dawa Sherpa em sua chegada ao Hospital HAMS em Katmandu, em 4 de junho de 2026. AFP Um guia nepalês de montanhismo que havia sido dado como morto no Monte Everest foi encontrado rastejando em direção ao Acampamento Base, seis dias após ter sido visto com vida pela última vez. Dawa Sherpa foi visto pela última vez acima do Acampamento 3, que fica a uma altitude de cerca de 7,5 mil metros, enquanto descia a montanha após alcançar o cume. 📱Favorite o g1 no Google e acompanhe as principais notícias do dia As esperanças de encontrá-lo com vida eram pequenas, já que o ar nessa altitude é rarefeito — mas, na quinta-feira (04), uma equipe de limpeza avistou o experiente alpinista, que apresentava congelamento nas mãos, mas parecia estar em bom estado de saúde, deslizando lentamente para baixo. "Dawa conseguiu sobreviver por dias mesmo contra todas as probabilidades. É nada menos que um milagre", disse Pemba Sherpa, diretor executivo da 8K Expeditions, que coordenava as buscas. "Este é um verdadeiro auto-resgate." Cinco pessoas morreram até agora nas escaladas deste ano — três delas nepaleses que estavam envolvidos em trabalhos de preparação para iniciar uma escalada, segundo a agência de notícias AFP. Mais de mil pessoas alcançaram o cume do Everest nesta temporada, que foi a mais movimentada já registrada. Como corpos congelados de alpinistas foram recuperados da 'zona da morte' do Everest Dawa Sherpa — também conhecido como Hillary Dawa Sherpa, em referência ao famoso montanhista Edmund Hillary — estava "deslizando lentamente" pela chamada Cascata de Gelo do Khumbu em direção ao Acampamento Base quando foi encontrado, disse Pemba Sherpa. "Até onde eu sei, ninguém sobreviveu sozinho naquela altitude no Everest até agora. É um milagre ter sobrevivido por seis dias sozinho e descido em segurança. Acho que ele deve ter ficado dentro das tendas para se manter seguro", disse Pemba Sherpa. Dawa Sherpa está "acordado e recebendo tratamento", segundo Nishant Dhakal, médico da unidade de terapia intensiva do Hospital HAMS, em Katmandu. "Ele me reconheceu… está bem e consegue falar", disse sua filha Mhendo Lhamo Sherpa à agência de notícias Reuters após visitá-lo. "Estamos felizes." Antes de ser encontrado, a esposa do alpinista de 52 anos disse à AFP que havia realizado orações por sua alma. Damu Sherpa (à esquerda), esposa do alpinista Dawa Sherpa, é consolada por um parente no Hospital HAMS em Katmandu, em 4 de junho de 2026. AFP Na quarta-feira, Chris Thrall, alpinista e ex-fuzileiro naval da Marinha Real britânica, publicou uma homenagem a Dawa Sherpa no Instagram, acreditando que ele havia morrido na montanha. No vídeo, Thrall lembrou que Dawa Sherpa havia "se sentado para descansar com a mochila" enquanto desciam do Acampamento 4, o acampamento mais alto antes do cume. "E eu me virei e disse: 'Hillary, você está bem, irmão?' Ele disse: 'Sim, sim, estou bem, Chris, por favor vá, vá!'", contou Thrall. "Isso não é novidade, sabe, eu seguia na frente, ou ele seguia na frente." Ao descer, Thrall encontrou um alpinista polonês em dificuldades que fazia parte do grupo, e eles continuaram a descida juntos. Mas Dawa Sherpa nunca os alcançou. "Foi uma longa tentativa de chegar ao cume. O que deveria levar cinco dias para subir ao cume e voltar nos levou 11 dias, de tão desafiadoras que estavam as condições", disse Thrall. "Então, eu deveria voltar para buscar o Sherpa, que provavelmente vai aparecer e estar bem, como já aconteceu centenas de vezes antes?", acrescentou. Um parente de Dawa, Kung Sherpa, havia expressado insatisfação com o andamento das buscas em entrevista à Outside, um site de esportes de aventura. As buscas, quando começaram, foram conduzidas por uma empresa chamada 8K Expeditions, que acabou conseguindo resgatá-lo por via aérea para um local seguro. Usamos inteligência artificial para traduzir esta reportagem, originalmente escrita em inglês. O texto foi revisado por um jornalista da BBC antes da publicação. Saiba mais aqui sobre como a BBC está usando a inteligência artificial (link para texto em inglês). VEJA TAMBÉM: Trilheiros ficam 'presos' por duas horas em montanha de Minas devido a neblina e frio
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