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Record number of climbers summit Mount Everest from Nepali side despite overcrowding concerns

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A record 274 climbers reached the summit of Mount Everest in a single day this week, as critics warn the world’s tallest peak is becoming dangerously overcrowded with thrill-seekers willing to pay $15,000 for a shot at the top.
The surge shattered the previous Nepali record of 223 climbers set in 2019, Rishi Bhandari, secretary general of the Expedition Operators Association of Nepal, told Reuters on Thursday.
«This is the highest number of climbers in a single day so far,» Bhandari said, adding that the final summit total could rise even further as some climbers had not yet officially reported their successful ascents.
Nepal has already issued 494 Everest climbing permits this season, each costing climbers $15,000.
EXTREME TRAVEL DESTINATION TO RESTRICT POPULAR MOUNTAIN ACCESS
Climbers walk in a long queue as they head to the summit of Mount Everest in the Solukhumbu district, Nepal, on May 18, 2026. (Purnima Shrestha/Reuters)
Climbers this year are ascending only from the Nepal side of Everest because China reportedly did not issue permits for expeditions from the Tibetan side.

Mount Everest is shown in Nepal. On Monday, seven people died at the base camp on Mount Yalung Ri, also in Nepal. (Paula Bronstein/Getty Images)
Mountaineering experts have long criticized Nepal for allowing large numbers of climbers on Everest, warning that overcrowding can create life-threatening bottlenecks high on the mountain in Everest’s deadly «death zone,» where oxygen levels plunge to dangerously low levels.
LEGENDARY MOUNTAINEER JIM WHITTAKER, FIRST AMERICAN TO SUMMIT EVEREST, DEAD AT 97

Mountaineers line up as they climb a slope during their ascent to the summit of Mount Everest in Nepal on May 31, 2021. (Lakpa Sherpa/AFP)
Nepal has attempted to respond to safety concerns in recent years by tightening rules and increasing fees for climbers, though some expedition leaders have defended the high number of climbers.
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«If teams carry enough oxygen it is not a big problem,» expedition organizer Lukas Furtenbach of the Austria-based Furtenbach Adventures told the outlet. «We have mountains in the Alps like the Zugspitze where we have 4,000 persons on top per day. So 274 is actually not a big number, considering this mountain is 10 times bigger.»
mount everest, extreme travel, travel, asia world regions, world
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Nuevo respaldo de EEUU al Gobierno de Bolivia: “No dejaremos que derroquen líderes elegidos democráticamente”

En medio de la ola de conflictos sociales que atraviesa Bolivia, el gobierno de Estados Unidos volvió a expresar su respaldo al presidente Rodrigo de Paz, que enfrenta pedidos de renuncia a solo seis meses de haber asumido el cargo.
A través de una publicación de X, el secretario de Estado de EEUU, Marco Rubio, expresó: “que no quepa duda: Estados Unidos apoya sin reservas al gobierno constitucional legítimo de Bolivia. No dejaremos que delincuentes y narcotraficantes derroquen a líderes elegidos democráticamente en nuestro hemisferio”.
Se trata del tercer pronunciamiento de respaldo a Paz en lo que va de la semana. El domingo, la Oficina de Asuntos del Hemisferio Occidental condenó las manifestaciones y expresó su apoyo al gobierno boliviano para restablecer “el orden en favor de la paz, la seguridad y la estabilidad del pueblo”.
“En Bolivia, los disturbios y los bloqueos han provocado una crisis humanitaria, causando escasez de medicamentos, alimentos y combustible. Condenamos todas las acciones destinadas a desestabilizar al gobierno democráticamente elegido de Rodrigo Paz Pereira”, se lee en el documento difundido.

Dos días después, el subsecretario de Estado, Christopher Landau —que había participado como invitado en la posesión de Paz—, señaló que “aquellos que perdieron abrumadoramente en las urnas el año pasado están intentando derrocar al presidente”. A decir de Landau, los manifestantes tienen “apoyo del crimen organizado y narcotraficantes”.
El número dos del Departamento de Estado informó que sostuvo una conversación telefónica con su “amigo” Rodrigo Paz en la que le ratificó el apoyo de Estados Unidos y el rechazo a “este intento de sustituir el orden institucional por el dominio de la turba”.
Las declaraciones de los funcionarios estadounidenses van en línea con lo señalado por la administración de Paz, que en más de una ocasión ha acusado sin pruebas a los manifestantes de estar financiados con dinero del narcotráfico.
Bolivia atraviesa un tiempo de tensión tras varios días de protestas convocadas por diversos sectores para presentar reclamos sindicales —por incremento salarial y la abrogación de una ley que autorizaba cambios en la propiedad agraria, principalmente—, pero luego surgieron pedidos de renuncia contra el presidente por un descontento general con su gestión.
Hace más de dos semanas que indígenas del altiplano realizan bloqueos que tienen cercada la ciudad de La Paz, que padece de escasez de algunos alimentos e insumos básicos. En este tiempo hubo dos jornadas de violencia cuando mineros, equipados con dinamita y material explosivo, se enfrentaron a la Policía, atacaron instituciones públicas y agredieron físicamente a civiles.
Los conflictos sociales provocaron una fuerte reacción internacional. Además de los pronunciamientos del gobierno estadounidense, ocho países latinoamericanos —Argentina, Chile, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guatemala, Panamá, Paraguay y Perú— emitieron un comunicado conjunto en el que rechazaron “toda acción orientada a desestabilizar el orden democrático” y a “alterar la institucionalidad” del Gobierno.
De igual forma, la Unión Europea expresó su preocupación por la situación en Bolivia, al igual que lo hicieron más de 30 expresidentes de América y España que conforman el Grupo Idea.
El miércoles, el Consejo Permanente de la Organización de Estados Americanos (OEA) tuvo una sesión extraordinaria para discutir la actualidad boliviana, en la que los países miembros llamaron a preservar la institucionalidad democrática frente a la crisis social y política que atraviesa el país.

A pesar de este respaldo prácticamente unánime de la comunidad internacional al gobierno de Paz, el conflicto generó una crisis diplomática con Colombia, luego de que la Cancillería boliviana decidiera expulsar a su embajadora en rechazo a declaraciones que había hecho el presidente Gustavo Petro en respaldo a las movilizaciones.
El canciller Fernando Aramayo calificó las afirmaciones de Petro como “injerencia en asuntos internos” y expulsó a Elizabeth García. Más tarde, Colombia respondió a esta acción expulsando al representante diplomático de Bolivia, Percy Molina.
Aunque la reacción boliviana ha sido criticada y algunos líderes de opinión la han considerado desproporcionada e inoportuna, el presidente Paz la justificó horas más tarde en una conferencia de prensa: “El ataque de Petro es un ataque a la democracia boliviana”.
Diplomacy / Foreign Policy
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Se está formando un poderoso fenómeno de El Niño. Si la historia sirve de referencia, podría golpear con fuerza

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EXCLUSIVE: ‘Phantom employees’ scandal spurs GOP crackdown on $36B incentive for companies to bypass Americans

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FIRST ON FOX: The discovery of 10,000 «phantom employees» exploiting a federal work program has helped spur Republicans to tackle the financial incentives behind a foreign worker pipeline costing Americans hundreds of thousands of jobs per year.
Under current federal law, hundreds of thousands of foreign students and employers participating in the Optional Practical Training (OPT) extension program are exempt from paying Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes, which companies are required to pay for domestic workers. This has led to the creation of a «significant financial incentive» for employers to hire foreign OPT workers over Americans.
Republican Rep. Glenn Grothman of Wisconsin introduced a bill Thursday, titled the «OPT Fair Tax Act,» that eliminates that incentive by requiring employers to pay the same Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes paid for American workers. By closing the loophole, Grothman believes the bill «helps create a more level playing field for American graduates entering the workforce.»
The congressman told Fox News Digital that «Americans should not be put at a disadvantage because Washington created a loophole that favors hiring foreign workers over qualified U.S. citizens.» He added that «too many young Americans graduating from our colleges and universities are forced to compete against a system that tilts the playing field against them.»
DOJ CALLS FOR TIPS ON EMPLOYERS FAVORING FOREIGN WORKERS IN HIRING PRACTICES
Rep. Glenn Grothman, R-Wis., (center) dropped a bill Thursday to kill the financial incentives behind a foreign worker pipeline costing Americans hundreds of thousands of jobs after U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) uncovered 10,000 «phantom employees» exploiting a federal work program. (Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
Grothman’s bill is the House companion to a Senate bill introduced by Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., in September.
Though Cotton’s bill has not passed, OPT has faced increased scrutiny after Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons announced federal investigators uncovered more than 10,000 foreign students connected to «suspect employers» as part of a massive fraud scheme involving the program.
Lyons said that OPT, which lets international students on F-1 visas work temporarily in the country in jobs related to their field of study, had «ballooned into an uncontrolled guest worker pipeline with hundreds of thousands of foreign students working in the United States.»
He said that «as the program size exploded, so has the fraud.»
«Today, we are announcing we have identified over 10,000 foreign students who claim to be working for highly suspect employers, and that’s just among the top 25 OPT employers. This is only the tip of the iceberg,» he said.
The ICE director also said investigators uncovered what he referred to as «phantom employees,» who he said are foreign students who obtained work authorization through OPT but never actually showed up for work at the sites they claimed to work out of.
TRUMP-BACKED HOUSING BILL CLEARS HOUSE AFTER GOP DEFIES SENATE PRESSURE CAMPAIGN

Todd Lyons, acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, arrives for the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee hearing on oversight of ICE, Customs and Border Protection, and Citizenship and Immigration Services in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 12, 2026. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc. via Getty Images)
Grothman told Fox News Digital that these findings «point to serious vulnerabilities within the OPT program.»
He said that «reports that thousands of foreign students in the OPT program were tied to phantom employees and suspicious employers should alarm every American,» adding, «Right now, the federal government has created a financial incentive to hire foreign workers over Americans.»
Grothman said the scale of the tax preference has been significant. He pointed to data gathered by the technology and industry think tank Institute for Progress, which found that between fiscal years 2017 and 2022, an average of approximately 330,000 students participated in OPT annually. The think tank also estimated that eliminating the tax exemption would increase federal revenue by between $27 billion and $36 billion over a 10-year period.
GOP BILL TARGETS BLUE STATE FOR BILLIONS IN COVID-ERA UNEMPLOYMENT DEBT DUMPED ON BUSINESSES

A general view of the U.S. Capitol Building from the top of the Washington Monument in Washington, D.C., on May 2, 2026. (Ken Cedeno/Reuters)
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«Congress should be focused on opening doors for young Americans, helping U.S. graduates find good-paying jobs and ensuring employers are encouraged to hire Americans first. Not creating incentives for companies to bypass American talent,» he emphasized.
«The American people deserve to know how so many questionable employers were able to operate within the system for so long,» he continued. «Congress should be prioritizing American workers and restoring integrity to programs that have become increasingly vulnerable to abuse and exploitation.»
jobs, republicans, immigration, social security, congress, house of representatives politics
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