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First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • 13
    Feb
    2013
    5:50pm, EST

    Exiled Tibetans mark 100th self-immolation with candle light vigil

    Prakash Mathema / AFP - Getty Images

    Exiled Tibetans take part in a candlelight vigil following the self-immolation attempt by a monk earlier in Kathmandu, Nepal, Feb. 13.

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    Tibetans-in-exhile attend a candlelit vigil after a Tibetan man self-immolated at Boudhanath in Kathmandu on Feb. 13.

    Niranjan Shrestha / AP

    An Exiled Tibetan participates in a candle light vigil in solidarity with fellow Tibetans who have self-immolated, in Katmandu, Feb. 13.

    Exiled Tibetans in Kathmandu, Nepal, participated in a candle light vigil Wednesday to show solidarity with fellow Tibetans who have self-immolated as a protest against Chinese rule. Earlier in the day, a monk doused himself with gasoline in a Kathmandu restaurant at Boudhanath Stupa, one of the world's holiest Buddhist shrines, and set himself on fire, marking the 100th self-immolation attempt since 2009.

    • China detains 70 in bid to crack down on Tibet self-immolation protests
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    3 comments

    It's hard to believe that the world allows China to take Tibet, try to destroy their culture, force hundreds of thousands of Chinese people to move into Tibet to destabilize the nation and no one seems to care. Don't we care about these Tibetans, did we not learn from our not to distant past when we …

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    Explore related topics: world-news, religion, protest, tibet, nepal, kathmandu, self-immolation
  • 17
    Dec
    2012
    3:55am, EST

    Soldiers hunt for 'mad' elephant that killed 4 in Nepal

    By Reuters

    Soldiers in Nepal hunted for a wild elephant on Monday after it strayed into villages in the southern part of the Himalayan nation and killed four people over three months, officials said.

    On Saturday, the elephant walked into a thatched house in Gardi village adjoining Chitwan National Park, 50 miles south of Kathmandu, pulled an elderly couple from bed and trampled them to death, said Shiva Ram Gelal, assistant district administrator from Bharatpur, the nearest city.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The same animal killed two other villagers within the last three months, park officials said.

    "We have given orders to the army to shoot the elephant that has gone mad," Gelal told Reuters. "Soldiers are now searching for it."

    Baby elephant orphaned in slaughter finds a foster mom

    Nepal has about 300 elephants, including more than 100 domesticated ones which are used by hotels and national parks to take tourists on jungle rides to watch wild animals like one-horned Asian rhinoceroses and Bengal tigers.

    Elephants are protected by law and anyone convicted for killing one faces up to 15 years in jail.

    Report: Poachers slaughter half the elephant population in Cameroon park

    However, Gelal said the Local Administration Act, a Nepali law, allowed authorities to kill the animal if it was responsible for the loss of human life.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    19 comments

    Where is manly man Ted "the Diaper" Nugent when you need him. Oh wait this animal can fight back and is actually dangerous so I guess Ted wouldn't be seen unless they can secure it to a tree somehow, for that manly shot.

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    Explore related topics: south-and-central-asia, featured, nepal, elephant
  • 26
    Nov
    2012
    4:44am, EST

    Turning garbage 'into gold': Nepali artists transform Everest litter into art

    Reuters

    A visitor takes a closer look at art made from trash picked from Mount Everest at a visual art symposium in Kathmandu on Nov. 20.

    By Reuters

    KATHMANDU, Nepal -- Fifteen Nepali artists were closeted for a month with a heap of 1.5 tons of trash picked up from Mount Everest. When they emerged, they had transformed the litter into art.


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    The 75 sculptures, including one of a yak and another of wind chimes, were made from empty oxygen bottles, gas canisters, food cans, torn tents, ropes, crampons, boots, plates, twisted aluminium ladders and torn plastic bags dumped by climbers over decades on the slopes of the world's highest mountain.

    Kripa Rana Shahi, director of art group Da Mind Tree, said the sculpting -- and a resulting recent exhibition in the Nepali capital of Kathmandu -- was aimed at spreading awareness about keeping Mount Everest clean.

    "Everest is our crown jewel in the world," Shahi said. "We should not take it for granted. The amount of trash there is damaging our pride."

    Nearly 4,000 people have climbed the 29,035-foot Mount Everest, many of them several times, since it was first scaled by New Zealander Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay Sherpa in 1953.

    Although climbers need to deposit $4,000 with the government, which is refunded only after they provide proof of having brought the garbage generated by them from the mountain, activists say effective monitoring is difficult.

    PhotoBlog: Nepali teen says she is youngest woman to climb Mount Everest

    Climbers returning from the mountain say its slopes are littered with trash, which is buried under the snow during the winter and comes out in the summer when the snow melts.

    'Nothing goes to waste in art'
    The trash used in the art works was picked up from the mountain by Sherpa climbers in 2011 and earlier this year and carried down by porters and trains of long-haired yaks.

    Laurence Tan / Reuters, file

    A basket of garbage sits at Everest Base Camp, with the Himalayan range seen in the background, in May 2011.

    The yaks were commemorated in one work. For another, empty oxygen cylinders were mounted on a metal frame to make Buddhist prayer wheels.

    Another, by wall painter Krishna Bahadur Thing, is a Tibetan mandala painting showing the location of Mount Everest in the universe -- made by sticking yellow, blue and white pieces of discarded beer, food cans and other metals on a round board.

    Climbers hoping to conquer the world's tallest peak hit a bottleneck over the weekend when the weather cleared, which caused a greater number of climbers to attempt the same route without the ability to pass one another. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    Visitors said they were amazed at the way waste products were turned into useful items.

    "It shows that anything can be utilised in an artistic way and nothing goes to waste in art," said 18-year-old fine arts student Siddhartha Pudasaini.

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    The art is on sale for prices from $15 to $2,300, with part of the proceeds going to the artists and the rest to the Everest Summiteers' Association, which sponsored the collection of garbage from the mountain, organizers said.

    "Garbage on Everest is shameful. We are trying to turn it into gold here," association chief Wangchu Sherpa told Reuters.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    21 comments

    I guess pictures are out of the question.

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    Explore related topics: featured, art, nepal, south-asia, trash, garbage, everest
  • 28
    Sep
    2012
    3:49am, EDT

    Tourists headed for Everest region among 19 killed in fiery Nepal plane crash

    Nineteen people have died in a plane crash in Nepal. They were on their way to climb Mount Everest. The plane crashed into a field shortly after take-off from the capital Kathmandu. It was bound for Lukla, the starting point for a trek through the Himalayan mountains to the base camp of Mount Everest. ITV's Paul Davies reports.

    By NBC News wire services

    KATMANDU, Nepal -- A plane carrying trekkers to the Everest region crashed and caught fire just after takeoff Friday in Nepal's capital, killing 19 people.

    The victims included British, Chinese and Nepali passengers, authorities said.

    The pilot of the domestic Sita Air flight reported trouble two minutes after takeoff, and Katmandu airport official Ratish Chandra Suman said the pilot appeared to have been trying to turn back. 

    The crash site is only 547 yards from the airport, and the wrecked plane was pointing toward the airport area.

    Reuters said it was a twin-engine, propeller-driven Dornier aircraft.


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    Investigators were trying to determine the cause of the crash and identify the bodies. Suman said he could not confirm if the plane was already on fire before it crashed.

    Villagers forced back by flames
    Cellphone video shot by locals showed the front section of the plane was on fire when it first hit the ground and it appeared the pilot had attempted to land the plane on open ground beside a river.

    The fire quickly spread to the rear, but the tail was still in one piece at the scene near the Manohara River on the southwest edge of Katmandu.

    PhotoBlog: More images from the crash site 

    Villagers were unable to approach the plane because of the fire and it took some time for firefighters to reach the area and bring the fire under control.

    A plane carrying 19 people crashed shortly after taking off in Katmandu, Nepal, catching fire and killing all on board. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Nepal officials: 6 survive, 15 killed as plane hits mountain in Himalayas

    Soldiers and police shifted through the crash wreckage looking for bodies and documents to help identify the victims.

    Seven passengers were British and five were Chinese; the other four passengers and the three crew members were from Nepal, authorities said.

    Large numbers of local people and security forces gathered at the crash site. The charred bodies were taken by vans to the hospital morgue.

    Gateway to Everest
    The weather in Katmandu and surrounding areas was clear on Friday morning, and it was one of the first flights to take off from Katmandu's Tribhuwan International Airport. Other flights reported no problems, and the airport operated normally.

    The plane was heading for Lukla, the gateway to Mount Everest. Thousands of Westerners make treks in the region around the world's highest peak each year. Autumn is considered the best time to trek the foothills of the Himalayan peaks.

    More international coverage from NBC News 

    In May, 15 people were killed when their plane crashed into a hill in northwest Nepal.

    Autumn is the peak tourism season in Nepal, which has eight of the world's 14 highest mountains, including Mount Everest. At least 11 people were killed in an avalanche in northwest Nepal on Sunday.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

    Dec. 4: Nepal's top politicians hold their Cabinet meeting on Mount Everest to highlight the danger global warming poses on glaciers ahead of next week's climate change talks in Copenhagen. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

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    53 comments

    Just announced. The aircraft hit a vulture immediately after takeoff and still at low altitude, heavy with fuel, passengers and cargo. To make the turn back to the airport, possibly on one engine and no altitude to speak of, they really had little or no chance.

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    Explore related topics: featured, crash, plane, nepal, tourists, everest, katmandu, trekkers, dornier
  • 23
    Sep
    2012
    9:13am, EDT

    Nine swept to death in Nepal avalanche

    Handout / Reuters

    Rescue team members carry a survivor (center) after an avalanche at Mount Manaslu Base Camp, Sunday.

    By Reuters

    Updated at 2:15 p.m. ET: KATHMANDU, Nepal - An avalanche swept away climbers and their camps on the world's eighth highest mountain in northwestern Nepal on Sunday, killing at least nine people, police said.

    A former president of Nepal Mountaineering Association, Ang Tshering Sherpa, said most of the dead climbers were French and that others were from Italy, Germany and Spain.


    French news channel BFM TV reported that four of those killed on Mount Manaslu were French, citing a mountain climber.

    Nepalese officials confirmed earlier that the dead included climbers from Nepal, Germany and Spain, and they said four people were missing. Five injured climbers were rescued by helicopters and flown to the capital Kathmandu.


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    German climber Andreas Reitero, 26, said he was sleeping in his tent when the avalanche struck at about 4 a.m. local time (2315 GMT on Saturday). His camp was about 7,000 meters (22,950 feet) above sea level.

    "It was a big sound. I was afraid," Reitero told Reuters from hospital in Kathmandu after being rescued by a helicopter from the mountain, 100 km (60 miles) northwest of the capital.

    "I was so confused that I can't say how far I was swept away or how many people were there in the camp at the time of avalanche," said the climber, who is being treated for a back injury. "I had luck. I did not go far enough and was (left) outside ... not buried under snow."

    Reitero was one in a group of 13 climbers - 11 Germans and two Austrians. One German member of the group died, he said.

    A French Foreign Ministry spokesman would not confirm any deaths but said "at least three" French climbers were injured.

    Police Inspector Basant Mishra said the bodies of a German climber and a Nepali guide were recovered from the snow on the 8,163-metre (26,781-foot) mountain.

    "Rescue pilots have spotted seven other bodies on the mountain," Mishra said. 

    Sources at the Spanish Foreign Ministry said one of the dead climbers was Spanish, without giving further details.

    The accident took place at 7,000 meters (22,950 feet), making it difficult for land rescue teams to reach the scene.

    Helicopters were dispatched to the remote area to look for those missing after the early morning accident, but cloud and fog were complicating rescue efforts, Mishra said.

    Hundreds of foreign climbers flock every year to Himalayan peaks in Nepal, which has eight of the world's 14 highest mountains, including Mount Everest. September marks the beginning of the autumn climbing season which runs through November.

    In the last major accident, at least 42 people including 17 foreigners, were killed in heavy snowfall in the Mount Everest region in 1995.

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    10 comments

    Bad way to die.

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  • 11
    Sep
    2012
    12:42pm, EDT

    Nepalese students protest fuel prices in Kathmandu

    Navesh Chitrakar / Reuters

    Nepalese riot police surround a student participating in a torch rally organized by various student unions in Kathmandu.

    Niranjan Shrestha / AP

    Nepalese students affiliated to various political parties participate in a torch rally against the hike in fuel prices in Katmandu, Nepal, on Sept. 11. The rise in prices came into effect last week and student organizations say the protest will carry on until the government addresses their demand of relieving the price hike, according to news reports.

     

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    Comment

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    Explore related topics: world-news, politics, protest, nepal
  • 1
    Aug
    2012
    11:57am, EDT

    A Ramadan day in the life

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    Muslim boy Sabir Ali, aged 8, looks across Kathmandu from a balcony during the Islamic fasting month of Ramadan at the Jamia school in the Nepali capital on July 27, 2012.

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    Mohamad Udin Sekh, aged 12, a Jamia school pupil from Janakpur village in eastern Nepal.

    Narendra Shrestha of the European Pressphoto Agency reports — The fasting month of Ramadan is a testing time for the young students of the Jamia Gaushia Ahsanual Barkat Islamic boys' school in Kathmandu, because they have to refrain from consuming food and drinking water from sunrise until sunset. About 30 students from around Nepal as well as neighboring India are accommodated, many of them from poor families. 

    Their everyday ritual for the month begins at around 3 a.m. when they wake and freshen up for sehari (or suhoor), their morning meal. At around 4:30 a.m. they attend morning prayer, a process that is repeated at 1, 5, 7 and 8 p.m.

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    Schoolboys read textbooks at the Jamia school.

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    Boys attend the afternoon prayer.

    During the day the students attend their regular classes but according to Mohamad Aslam, a school official, the boys are less interested in studying than usual and the teachers do not force them to attend. Hence, most of the time they play, chat and read the Quran. After sunset, they sit together for aftari (or iftar), the evening meal. 

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    A schoolboy sleeps with an Islamic textbook covering his face.

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    A group of boys play in a courtyard of the Jamia school.

    Each student pays 2,000 to 3,500 Nepalese Rupees ($22 to $39) per month to cover tuition, food and accommodation at the school, which offers education from nursery to eighth grade. Apart from Islamic studies, Urdu and Arabic language classes, the school also provides English and math classes. After completing their education, two students each year get the opportunity to travel to Egypt for higher education.

     

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    The boys pray before eating 'aftari' (or iftar), the evening meal with fruits, vegetables and sweets, which breaks their daily fast.

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    The boys prepare to go to bed.

    Related content:

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    4 comments

    This story is crap and imaginary one! MSNBC should maintain some standards and not publish these sorts of imaginary BS stories, which are completly opposite of realities. By now most non-Muslims know the dangers from followers of Isalmic cult!

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    Explore related topics: world-news, education, religion, featured, islam, muslim, nepal, south-asia, ramadan, kathmandu
  • 14
    May
    2012
    3:02am, EDT

    Nepal officials: 6 survive, 15 killed as plane hits mountain in Himalayas

    Santosh Pokharal / Reuters

    Flight attendant Roshni Saiju is brought to hospital for treatment after being rescued.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    KATMANDU, Nepal -- A plane crashed into a mountain in the Himalayas while trying to land at an airport in northern Nepal on Monday, killing 15 people and critically injuring six.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    The plane hit a mountain while it was turning around to land at Jomsom Airport, said Laxmi Raj Sharma, chief government administrator in the area. The wrecked aircraft was in pieces but did not catch fire.


    Sharma said initial investigations show that the plane might have suffered technical problems. The airport is at 8,800 feet elevation, where flying is more difficult.

    Umesh Pun / AFP - Getty Images

    A survivor looks on after receiving medical attention at a hospital in Pokhara, Nepal.

    'Hit a muddy slope'
    Sharma said survivors were flown to the nearby city of Pokhara for treatment.

    Police official Binod Singh told AFP that the plane "hit a muddy slope and the plane is now buried in the side of the hill."

    Prime Minister Baburam Bhattarai issued a statement expressing condolences at the deaths of the 15 people.

    Police official Nareswor Aryal the plane carried two pilots and a flight attendant -- all Nepalese -- along with 16 Indians and two Westerners. Aryal couldn't immediately say where the Westerners are from. However, AFP reported that two Danish nationals were among the passengers.

    The airport is a gateway to a popular destination for trekkers and for Hindu pilgrims on their way to the revered Muktinath temple. It is about 125 miles northwest of the capital, Katmandu.

    The Dornier aircraft belonged to the local Agni Air company.

    The Associated Press and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    20 comments

    I have flown into this airport, and let me tell you even on a good day it is a harrowing experience. The landing strip (basically an unpaved strip of dirt) is located in the narrowest of valleys. The small plane has to bank about 20-30ft from the side of the mountain in order to touch down.

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  • 24
    Jan
    2012
    4:08am, EST

    Nepal cops: Smuggler hid drugs in Buddhist prayer wheels

    By Msnbc.com staff and wire services

    KATMANDU, Nepal -- Police in Nepal have arrested a U.S. man who was allegedly a member of a smuggling ring that sent illegal drugs into the United States by concealing them in Buddhist prayer wheels.

    The drugs, which were also put into metal bowls, were sent via Federal Express, authorities said.


    Police official Navraj Silwal said Kristian Peter Stiegler, 45, was detained while trying to send 2.5 pounds of hashish, a form of cannabis, and 2 pounds of suspected opium.

    If tests confirm the substance is opium, Stiegler could face up to 20 years in prison.

    However, Silwal said Stiegler would likely get a lighter sentence because he was cooperating in the investigation into the alleged drug ring.

    'Hefty sum'
    Silwal said Stiegler has lived in Nepal and India for three years and was suspected of sending several drug shipments.

    The Himalayan News Service said hashish was allegedly sent to Europe, as well as to the United States.

    It reported the smuggling ring was discovered when police in Dubai intercepted two parcels of hashish that Steigler had allegedly sent to a New Orleans woman.

    "Stiegler used to send hashish to the woman via airmail in the form of parcels and the woman used to distribute the drug in black market for a hefty sum," Yadav Raj Adhikari, chief of the Narcotic Drug Control Law Enforcement Unit, told the Himalayan News Service.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    33 comments

    The items were not exported from Thailand... Where any Buddhist religious items even the reproductions are restricted from export... On another note... I wonder why MSNBC is not reporting the Chinese KILLING Buddhist, AGAIN??? reference - http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_asiapacific/view/1 …

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    Explore related topics: featured, drugs, arrested, nepal, smuggling, buddhist, south-central-asia, prayer-wheels

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