This Article is From Jun 24, 2013

Uttarakhand: Rain hits rescue operations, 15,000 still stranded

New Delhi: Nearly 15,000 people remain stranded in Uttarakhand; the return of bad weather is impeding rescue operations. Helicopters have not been able to fly this morning, and landslides late on Sunday night have blocked major routes that were being used to evacuate people by foot.

Here are the latest developments in the story:

  1. Military helicopters have been grounded because of bad weather, suspending the evacuation by air of those still stranded, many without food and water, in remote areas of the state.

  2. 670 people are reported dead so far, but Uttarakhand's Disaster Management Minister Yashpal Arya has told reporters that he expects the death toll to touch 5,000. Officials warn many more bodies are yet to be pulled out from isolated areas that are completely cut-off.

  3. Hundreds of people are stuck in Harsil near Uttarkashi; thousands are cut off in the holy town of Badrinath.

  4. Preparations are underway for a mass cremation in the flood-ravaged holy town of Kedarnath amid concerns of an outbreak of disease from rotting bodies, officials said. Large amounts of ghee and wood are to be ferried by helicopter when the weather improves. "We have decided to start (a) mass cremation today. The priests of temples have been requested to participate in the final rites," KN Pandey, an official with the state disaster management team, told news agency AFP.

  5. The Met Department has forecast heavy rain over the next four days, but says there will be pockets of clear weather when helicopter rescue sorties can be made.

  6. There have been two major landslides reported near Rudraprayag, serving as a major base camp for rescue operations, which have blocked a main road that is being used to carry relief supplies. Bulldozers have been deployed to clear the road.

  7. 80,000 people have been evacuated since torrential hit on June 15 in peak tourist season centred on a pilgrimage to four shrines in Uttarkhand.

  8. Soldiers along with the Indo-Tibetan Border Police have been using harnesses and erecting rope bridges across flooded rivers as part of efforts to move people to safety.

  9. More than 1,000 bridges have been damaged along with roads, cutting off hard-hit villages and towns.

  10. The National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) is using Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) to locate survivors in remote areas that still remain inaccessible.



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