This Article is From Feb 12, 2021

'Possibility Of Human Presence': Rescuers To Dig Deeper In Tapovan Tunnel

Uttarakhand Glacier Burst: Uttarakhand tunnel: Union Home Secretary Ajay Kumar Bhalla chaired a meeting to review the progress of rescue and relief work being carried out by central and agencies

'Possibility Of Human Presence': Rescuers To Dig Deeper In Tapovan Tunnel

Glacier Disaster in Chamoli: Rescuers are making slow progress as water and slush continue to accumulate

Highlights

  • 35 bodies have been found and over 200 are missing: State government
  • Rescuers making slow progress as water and slush continue to accumulate
  • DRDO has been asked to send experts to analyse the situation
New Delhi:

Rescuers continue to dig through the rubble inside a damaged tunnel in Uttarakhand's Tapovan in the hope of finding survivors, six days after a glacier disaster struck a hydel power plant in the hill state.

Thirty-six bodies have been found and over 200 are missing, the Uttarakhand government said.

"Today, we will try to drill and gain entry into a smaller tunnel which is 12 meters below the existing tunnel as there might be a possibility of human presence there," said Uttarakhand DGP Ashok Kumar, news agency ANI reported.

"There's a possibility that water is accumulating above village Raini near Tapovan. Many aerial recces have been done. An 8-member rescue team was sent today on foot to assess the situation. Further action will be taken after evaluation," SDRF DG Ridhim Aggarwal said.

Union Home Secretary Ajay Kumar Bhalla chaired a meeting to review the progress of rescue and relief work being carried out by central and agencies at the site of the hydro project of NTPC in Tapovan, the Home Ministry said in a statement.

Mr Bhalla reviewed steps needed to regulate the flow of water from a temporary obstruction formed upstream from the project. The secretary of Defence Research and Development Organisation has been asked to send experts to analyse the situation.

The rescue operation was stopped briefly on Thursday when water level in Dhauliganga river nearby began rising again.

In a change of strategy, rescuers are focusing on drilling through the hardened debris in the tunnel in Chamoli district, rather than just shifting mounds of silt and sludge deposited there by the sudden flood.

The aim for now is to set up a "life-saving system", possibly to pump oxygen into the blocked tunnel, officials said, news agency PTI reported.

The Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP), the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF), the State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) and the Army are part of the multi-agency rescue effort, which continues even as hopes of finding the trapped workers alive recede every passing hour.

The rescue operation is focused on 1.5 km of a 2.5-km-long network of tunnels at the Tapovan-Vishnugad hydel power project.

A sudden flood in the Alaknanda river and its tributaries after the glacier broke off slammed the hydel project while people were still working there last Sunday, trapping and killing some of them.

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