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Evacuation In Disaster-Hit Uttarakashi Underway, 816 Rescued So Far

The Army managed to repair an optical fibre cable, meant for Army communication, which was damaged by flash floods.

Evacuation In Disaster-Hit Uttarakashi Underway, 816 Rescued So Far
The road access has been opened till Limchigad and work on a 90-ft Bailey Bridge is in progress. (File)
  • Road access restored to Limchigad and construction of a 90-ft Bailey Bridge is underway
  • Two Mi-17 and one Chinook deployed for rescue, with eight civil helicopters evacuating civilians
  • Army restored mobile and internet connectivity by repairing damaged optical fibre cable
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Dharali:

After the devastating flash-floods that hit Dharali and Harsil, 816 civilians have been rescued by the Indian Army, Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP), National Disaster Response Force (NDRF), and State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) till Saturday, according to a release.

The road access has also been opened till Limchigad, and the work on a 90-ft Bailey Bridge is in progress.

According to the release, today's rescue air plan includes deployment of two Mi-17 and one Chinook from Dharasu for stores and personnel induction, with eight civil helicopters from Matli continuing civilian evacuation.

Under 'Operation Dharali,' the Indian Army has been victorious in its efforts to restore mobile and internet connectivity in Uttarakhand's Harsil.

The Army managed to repair an optical fibre cable, meant for Army communication, which was damaged by flash floods.

Army signalers carried out the repair work amidst ongoing rescue-operation" rescue operations in Dharali, ensuring communication links for the area.

Indian Army canine teams have also been deployed to assist in search tasks in coordination with Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR), Zevar radar, and reconnaissance radars as part of the ongoing Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief (HADR) operations.

The canine teams have been actively engaged in search operations for the past three days, significantly contributing to locating individuals and supporting overall rescue efforts in the challenging terrain.

A large number of supplies, rations and essential materials have been sent to the flood-affected areas in Uttarakhand's Uttarkashi, an official said earlier today.

At least five people have been reported dead, and 50 are still missing. The SDRF has been actively involved in the rescue operations, utilising state-of-the-art equipment, including a victim-locating camera and a thermal imaging camera.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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