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History on Today: Olympic torch relayed on Mt. Qomolangma for first time on May 8, 2008

Editor: Zhang Jianfeng 丨CCTV.com

05-08-2017 09:03 BJT

The Olympic flame made its first trip to Mount Qomolangma as Chinese mountaineers brought it to the top of the world at 9:12 a.m. Beijing time (0112 GMT) on May 8, 2008.

Chinese climbers display an Olympic torch, an Olympic flame lantern, a flag of International Olympic Committee, a Chinese National flag and a flag of the 29th Olympic Games at the top of the 8844.43-meter summit of Mt. Qomolangma in southwest  China

Chinese climbers display an Olympic torch, an Olympic flame lantern, a flag of International Olympic Committee, a Chinese National flag and a flag of the 29th Olympic Games at the top of the 8844.43-meter summit of Mt. Qomolangma in southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region on May 8, 2008.

The 19-member team, of one ethnic Tu, 13 Tibetan, and five ethnic Han mountaineers, climbed from an 8,300-meter-high camp on Mt. Qomolangma with the Olympic flame in a special canister.

The team overcame one difficulty after another. They passed the Second Step between 8,600 meters and 8,700 meters, the biggest challenge in the climb as they had to inch forward on slippery 40-degree slopes.

At about 9:11 a.m., five bearers lit their torches, designed by rocket scientists one, after another to pass the flame along the final icy incline to the peak.

At 9:17, the final torch bearer, Tsering Wangmo, held her torch over her head on the summit, as other team members unfurled Olympic and Chinese flags, cheering "Beijing welcomes you", even though they can be heard struggling for breath through the live broadcast because of lack of oxygen and a temperature below minus 30 degrees Celsius.

"I am grateful to be given such an opportunity to bring the sacred flame to the top of Qomolangma," said Tsering Wangmo, who topped the 8,844-summit in 2006 at the age of 21.

"I am sure my husband in the heaven is so proud of me right now," said Gigi, the first of the five torch bearers.

Gigi's husband Renna, also a member of the China Tibet Mountaineering Team, died on his way up Gasherbrum I, the 11th highest peak on earth, in 2005.

"This is one of the greatest events in the history of the Games and a gift from the Chinese to the Olympics and people worldwide," Xi Jinping said in a telegram to climbers.

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