Falling debris hampers rescue of 40 workers trapped in Indian tunnel
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[November 15, 2023]
By Saurabh Sharma
LUCKNOW, India (Reuters) -Falling debris are hampering efforts to pull
out 40 workers trapped inside a collapsed Himalayan highway tunnel for
more than three days as rescuers prepared to deploy an advanced machine
to cut through the rubble faster.
Loose rocks have been falling into a tunnel that rescuers are trying to
create and this is the main challenge facing the operation at the
moment, said a top official in Uttarakhand state, where the disaster
occurred.
The men are trapped in an area of about 50 meters and are safe,
officials said, with food, water and oxygen being supplied through a
pipe since the collapse early on Sunday, and frequent contact is being
made with them through walkie-talkies.
"The plan is to drill through the debris, put mild steel pipes in it and
make a path for the laborers to move," Ranjit Sinha, the top disaster
management officer in Uttarakhand, told Reuters by phone.
"The only challenge is to remove the debris as it is very loose and it
keeps coming back."
India's Himalayas are prone to landslides, earthquakes and floods. The
tunnel collapse follows incidents of land subsidence that have been
blamed on rapid construction in the mountains.
A high-powered auger drilling machine is being set up at the site to cut
through the debris at 2.5 meters an hour as opposed to one meter by the
previous machine that suffered a glitch, Sinha said.
An estimated 50 meters remains to be drilled through before the trapped
workers are reached, said Anshu Manish Khalkho, an official of the
state-run highway management company NHIDCL.
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Members of rescue teams prepare to conduct a rescue operation after
a portion of an under-construction tunnel collapsed in Uttarkashi in
the northern state of Uttarakhand, India, November 14, 2023.
Uttarakhand State Disaster Response Force/Handout via REUTERS
CRITICISM
There were up to 60 men on the night shift in the 4.5-km (3-mile)
tunnel when it caved in before dawn. Men near the end of the tunnel
managed to get out in time but the 40 trapped men were working
deeper inside.
The ANI news agency showed footage on Wednesday of about a dozen
angry workers outside the tunnel calling for their colleagues to be
rescued quickly.
The men were working on the Char Dham highway, one of the most
ambitious projects of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government, but
the plan has faced criticism from environmental experts.
The project aims to connect four Hindu pilgrimage sites in the
mountains through 890 km (550 miles) of roads at a cost of $1.5
billion, but some work was halted in January after hundreds of
houses were damaged by subsidence along the routes.
The federal government has said it employed environmentally friendly
techniques in the design to make geologically unstable stretches
safer.
Work on the tunnel began in 2018 and was initially meant to be
finished by July 2022 but delays prior to Sunday's collapse had
already pushed the expected end-date back to next May, the
government said in a statement.
(Reporting by Saurabh Sharma in Lucknow, writing by Tanvi Mehta,
Krishn Kaushik and Shivam Patel; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan,
Robert Birsel and Gareth Jones)
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