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Nepali seeks to knock Pinoy off his pedestal as World's Shortest Man

File photo of Filipino Junrey Balawing, who was officially proclaimed the world's shortest man last year by the Guinness World Records, which measured him at 59.93 centimeters or 23.6 inches. (Photo from www.guinnessworldrecords.com)

InterAksyon.com
The online news portal of TV5

KATHMANDU - Could the reign of Filipino Junrey Balawing as the World's Shortest Man be, well, short-lived? Guinness World Records experts said Thursday they are to travel to a remote valley in southwestern Nepal to measure a 72-year-old claiming to be even shorter that the 59-cm Junrey.

Chandra Bahadur Dangi is 56 centimeters (22 inches) tall and weighs 12 kilos (26 pounds), he told a media conference broadcast by Nepali state television.

"We intend to travel to Mr. Dangi's village to officially measure him and are currently making provisions for medical professionals to assist us in the verification," Guinness World Records editor-in-chief Craig Glenday told Agence France-Presse by email.

State-run Nepal Television broadcast images on Wednesday of Dangi jumping off a park bench and taking a short walk in front of journalists.

Members of his family were quoted by local media as saying Dangi was in excellent health and had never taken medicine or been to hospital.

"We cannot confirm Mr. Dangi's height until formal measurements have been taken and verified by Guinness World Records officials but we hope to undertake the verification in the next few weeks," said Glenday, who is to make the journey to impoverished Dang district, which borders India.

Dangi has already become something of local celebrity in southern Nepal, appearing at community events and opening religious festivals.

Filipino Junrey Balawing, who measures 59.93 centimeters, took the title of World's Shortest Man last year from another Nepali, Khagendra Thapa Magar, who was measured in 2010 at 67 centimeters.

Magar's stint as the world's shortest man saw him travel to more than a dozen countries and make television appearances in Europe and the United States.

He was also the official face of Nepal's tourism campaign, which featured him as the smallest man in a country that is home to the world's highest peak, Mount Everest.