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KATHMANDU - Nepal plans to name an airport in the remote Everest region after pioneering climbers Sir Edmund Hillary, who died last week, and Tenzing Norgay Sherpa, a minister has said.
Tourism Minister Prithvi Subba Gurung said he would also propose to the cabinet that Nepal mark the day the pair climbed the world's highest mountain as Everest day.
New Zealand's Hillary, who died last week at the age of 88, and Nepal's Tenzing Norgay, who passed away in 1986 at the age of 72, climbed the 8850 metre Everest summit on May 29, 1953.
That feat opened up impoverished Nepal to the world as a popular destination for mountain climbing and trekking. Tourism now accounts for four percent of its GDP.
"I will propose in the cabinet that Lukla airport be renamed as Tenzing-Hillary airport in their honour," said Gurung.
Hillary built the remote hilly airstrip in the 1960s at Lukla, clinging to a hillside several days walk from the base camp at Mount Everest and is described by mountaineers as a thrilling start to an attempt on the mountain's south face.
"The choppers and small airplanes are often overloaded, vintage crafts balancing through the thin air and erratic winds of Himalaya," the mountaineering Web site mounteverest.net said in a 2005 weblog. "And - let's face it - they crash."
Gurung said he would also propose May 29 be observed as Everest day every year.
"Had they not climbed Everest no one would have known Nepal. They have made a very big contribution to Nepal's tourism and mountaineering," he said.
"I expect the proposals will be passed without opposition."
After the historic ascent, Hillary carried out conservation work and helped construct schools, hospitals, water supply schemes and trails in the remote Solukhumbhu district, home to Mount Everest and the ethnic Sherpa community known for their climbing skills.
Gurung said his plans followed demands from Sherpas as well as trekking and mountaineering firms to remember the pioneering climbers.
"When the government takes a final decision on the proposals that will be a small token of our respect for them."
-Reuters