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发表于 2010-1-26 23:10
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本帖最后由 jane 于 2010-1-27 02:55 编辑
看这里的评论:有人又发呆了。洋人不懂得变通,要么不理那茬,要么就把 xx登鞋的条例当成和美国法律那样正经的的法规去对待。2008年的中美女子登山交流,2边出的人和促进阿式登山一点关系都没有。美方的组织人一个是跟商业队上了cho oyu的老太在家自己开训练馆的,加上原来在法国混的交际花。交流需要双方努力,中方的人士如果有机会到美国访问,也应该尽力多做做宣传工作。
http://inclined.americanalpinecl ... strations-in-china/
为了大家的方便,把AAC的评论贴在这里:
One Response
AAC Member Says:
January 25th, 2010 at 11:11 AM
This team climbed illegally in China, which not only seriously endangers access to a spectacular climbing resource, but is a degradation of foreign relations with the Chinese climbing community and the Chinese government and an embarrassment to the AAC.
This team by receiving the Lyman-Spitzer award assumed the role of American Alpine Club Ambassadors and explicitly agreed to certain a code of ethics – that most importantly was in the 4th and 5th line of the “Selection Criteria” of the Lyman-Spitzer Cutting Edge Award application:
“All expeditions must be legal and obtain all necessary visas and permits required by local authorities.”
A direct violation and made even worse by the team being fully informed of the laws before they illegally climbed.
And
“All expeditions must be conducted in an environmentally conscious and sound approach, and with care and respect for local inhabitants.”
Important here is the complete disrespect of local inhabitants, including local law enforcement officials.
The American Alpine Club needs to be accountable for the outcome of this expedition.
In perusing the requirements for the Gore Shipton/Tilman grant, I don’t explicitly see the requirement that the team act within the laws of the country. However, any team traveling and climbing publicly and using widespread media coverage, industry sponsors (Mountain Hardwear, Sterling Rope, Evolv, and Black Diamond), and industry grants should be, if not only morally, but required by their sponsors to be obligated to climb within the laws of the country they are visiting. The only outcome of this will only be negative, as China will further restrict access to one of their best climbing regions. |
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