India glacier avalanche leaves 18 dead, more than 200 missing
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[February 08, 2021]
By Saurabh Sharma
LUCKNOW, India (Reuters) - Rescuers
searched for more than 200 people missing in the Indian Himalayas on
Monday, including some trapped in a tunnel, after part of a glacier
broke away, sending a torrent of water, rock and dust down a mountain
valley.
Sunday's violent surge below Nanda Devi, India's second-highest peak,
swept away the small Rishiganga hydro electric project and damaged a
bigger one further down the Dhauliganga river being built by state firm
NTPC.
Eighteen bodies have been recovered from the mountainsides, officials
said.
Most of the missing were people working on the two projects, part of the
many the government has been building deep in the mountains of
Uttarakhand state as part of a development push.
"As of now, around 203 people are missing," state chief minister
Trivendra Singh Rawat said, and the number was changing as more
information about people caught up the deluge emerged from the remote
area.
Videos on social media showed water surging through a small dam site,
washing away construction equipment and bringing down small bridges.
"Everything was swept away, people, cattle and trees," Sangram Singh
Rawat, a former village council member of Raini, the site closest to the
Rishiganga project, told local media.
It was not immediately clear what caused the glacier burst on a bright
Sunday morning. Experts said it had snowed heavily last week in the
Nanda Devi area and it was possible that some of the snow started
melting and may have led to an avalanche.
Rescue squads were focused on drilling their way through a 2.5 km (1.5
miles) long tunnel at the Tapovan Vishnugad hydropower project site that
NTPC was building 5 km (3 miles) downstream where about 30 workers were
believed trapped.
"We are trying to break open the tunnel, it's a long one, about 2.5 km,"
said Ashok Kumar, the state police chief. He said rescuers had gone 150
metres (yards) into the tunnel but debris and slush were slowing
progress.
There had been no voice contact yet with anyone in the tunnel, another
official said. Heavy equipment has been employed and a dog squad flown
to the site to locate survivors.
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Rescue teams in the Indian Himalayas are continuing efforts to
locate missing people, including workers from a nearby site, after
it was destroyed by an avalanche of rock, dust and water set off by
a glacier burst. Jayson Albano reports.
On Sunday, 12 people were rescued from another much smaller tunnel.
TRIGGER FOR GLACIER BURST
Uttarakhand is prone to flash floods and landslides and the disaster
prompted calls by environment groups for a review of power projects
in the ecologically sensitive mountains. In June 2013, record
monsoon rains there caused devastating floods that claimed close to
6,000 lives.
A team of scientists were flown over the site of the latest accident
on Monday to find out what exactly happened.
"It's a very rare incident for a glacial burst to happen. Satellite
and Google Earth images do not show a glacial lake near the region,
but there's a possibility that there may be a water pocket in the
region," said Mohd Farooq Azam, assistant professor, glaciology &
hydrology at the Indian Institute of Technology in Indore.
Water pockets are lakes inside the glaciers, which may have erupted
leading to this event. Environmental groups have blamed construction
activity in the mountains.
Himanshu Thakkar, co-ordinator of the South Asia Network of Dams,
Rivers and People, said that there were clear government
recommendations against the use of explosives for construction
purposes. "There have been violations."
The latest accident had also raised questions about the safety of
the dams. "The dams are supposed to withstand much greater force.
This was not a monsoon flood, it was much smaller."
(Additional reporting by Nivedita Bhattachargee and Neha Arora;
Writing by Sanjeev Miglani; Editing by Michael Perry, Raju
Gopalakrishnan and Giles Elgood)
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