Saturday, May 9, 2026
ADVT 
International

Nearly 200 Kailash Mansarovar Pilgrims Stuck In Nepal’s Humla

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Jun, 2019 07:51 PM
  • Nearly 200 Kailash Mansarovar Pilgrims Stuck In Nepal’s Humla

Nearly 200 Indians on their way back home from the Kailash Mansarovar pilgrimage in Tibet are stuck in Nepal’s Humla district due to alleged mismanagement by private tour operators, pilgrims claimed on Wednesday.


Every year, hundreds of Indians undertake the ‘yatra’ which involves trekking under inhospitable conditions. Holding significance for Hindus as the abode of Lord Shiva, it holds religious importance also for the Jains and the Buddhists.


The pilgrims are currently stuck in Hilsa town, near the Nepal-China border, where they reached from Burang in Tibet and were to immediately leave for Simikot by helicopter and then onwards to Nepalgunj, they said.


“When we reached here (Hilsa), we had to overstay because several people who had come here prior to us were made to overstay by the tour operators. They have been here for three days; they are getting to leave now and we will follow after that,” Pankaj Bhatnagar, 40, said.


Bhatnagar, who hails from Derabassi in Punjab, said the facilities are inadequate to accommodate the number of pilgrims that are in Hilsa and intermittent rain is only compounding the troubles.


There are groups of people whose tour is being managed by different private operators who have outsourced the work locally, said Mayank Agarwal, 28, a pilgrim from Gurgaon in Haryana.


“There is no regulation in the number of people arriving here. The number of pilgrims being brought here is just increasing. The facilities are not even bare minimum. The tour operators are not responding,” Agarwal, who accompanied his parents on the pilgrimage, told over phone.


Tour operators in India, however, said that the overstay of some pilgrims was caused as helicopter operations between Hilsa and Simikot had to be halted in view of bad weather.


“The flight operations there are totally dependent on weather. Now, with weather conditions improving, pilgrims are being sent to Simikot. However, those arrived in Hilsa first will get to depart first, except in cases of medical emergency and elderly people, who get preference. The movement is on and there is no problem,” Yatish Kumar of Noida-based Global Connect Hospitality said.

MORE International ARTICLES

New Zealand's Population Approaches 5 Million

New Zealand's Population Approaches 5 Million
New Zealand's population could hit five million by the end of 2019, the country's statistics department said on Thursday.  

New Zealand's Population Approaches 5 Million

Indian Content Damages Our Culture, Wont Allow Them On Our Channels: Pakistan's Chief Justice Saqib Nisar

Pakistan's Chief Justice Saqib Nisar on Wednesday said that the country's Supreme Court will not allow Indian content to be shown on Pakistani TV channels as it "damages our culture".

Indian Content Damages Our Culture, Wont Allow Them On Our Channels: Pakistan's Chief Justice Saqib Nisar

Swedish Woman Pregnant After Robot-Assisted Womb Transplant

Swedish Woman Pregnant After Robot-Assisted Womb Transplant
In a first, a Swedish woman has become the first to get pregnant after having a womb transplant performed by a robot.

Swedish Woman Pregnant After Robot-Assisted Womb Transplant

Indian American Congressman Ro Khanna Asks Trump To End Government Shutdown

Indian American Congressman Ro Khanna Asks Trump To End Government Shutdown
Trump may want to declare a 'national emergency' to sidestep Congress and build a border wall. 

Indian American Congressman Ro Khanna Asks Trump To End Government Shutdown

American-Sikhs Urge Pakistan Not To Make Any Changes At Kartarpur Complex

The appeal was made in the background of recent development where both Pakistani and Indian governments agreed to open up the Kartarpur Corridor for Sikhs.

American-Sikhs Urge Pakistan Not To Make Any Changes At Kartarpur Complex

Mysore-Born Gita Gopinath Joins IMF As First Woman Chief Economist

Gita Gopinath joined last week at a time, when she believes the world is experiencing a retreat from globalisation, posing challenges to multilateral institutions.  

Mysore-Born Gita Gopinath Joins IMF As First Woman Chief Economist