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After the Olympic torch's tour around the world, and ahead of its arrival in Beijing for the Games in August, the BBC's Jonah Fisher joins it for the high point of its trip - up Mount Everest.
In the eighth of his diary instalments, he watches the final ascent at last.
After 10 days of gazing at Mount Everest and the clouds blowing around its peak, Thursday 8 May was the day we'd all been waiting for.
The stars were still bright in the sky as I stumbled out of bed at six in the morning and onto the bus. This was only the second time we'd been allowed into base camp since we arrived at Everest.
After an initial commotion while someone looked for the remote control, we sat down in a big green tent in front of a huge television screen.
Over the next few hours we watched live pictures beamed back from the mountain as the Chinese mountaineering team worked its way from their final camp at 8300 metres towards the summit.
We took it in turns to marvel first at the strength of the climbers and then rather geekily the technical audacity of Chinese television. They'd put in place eight relay stations on the mountain and were feeding back incredible images of the torchbearers staggering the final steps up to the summit.
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EVEREST TORCH DIARY
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Packed into our tent the combination of patriotic local journalists and Olympic officials were working themselves into a frenzy. Football chants were aired as was a big Chinese flag.
At the top of Everest the lanterns were used to light an Olympic torch. A mini relay was carried out with two female Tibetan climbers the first and last to hold the torch.
Sitting in a packed tent watching a big screen television, it was a strange way for a story that I'd been working on for so long to come to a climax.
A couple of times as they climbed on screen I had to step outside and look at the mountain to remind myself that this drama was really taking place just a few kilometres away.
With a successful climb in their back pocket, more Chinese officials were willing to speak to us than usual.
Li Zhixin, the head of operations, was of particular interest on the question of why we'd been given so little information throughout our stay.
"We apologise to the local and international media, we didn't have any choice because of the outside interference," he said.
"We met with some very great pressures, I can tell you there are people still out there trying to interfere with the event. Our climbing torchbearers found their tracks and saw their lights up there on our routes."
It was the first we'd heard of anyone even getting close to the Everest climb and impossible to verify.
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