Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

50 IIT STUDENTS RESCUED, 5 MORE RAINRELATE­D DEATHS IN HP

- HT Correspond­ent letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

SHIMLA: About 50 IIT-students on a trek in Himachal Pradesh’s Lahaul valley were rescued by Indian Air Force helicopter­s while over 500 people remain stranded in other areas in Lahaul and Spiti district, officials said on Tuesday. While rains hit the pause button in the hill state, skies also cleared in Punjab and Haryana that had been witnessing continuous rainfall from the past three days.

The death toll in Himachal, battered by heavy rains - and snowfall in Lahaul and Spiti - has risen to 10 with five more deaths being reported on Tuesday. In Shimla, three labourers were killed and four others injured when a rock fell on their home in Nerwa’s Bihari Colony. Also, two people were killed when a car skidded off a slippery road in the state’s Kinnaur district.

There were only scattered showers in the state on Tuesday and the Met department predicted that the weather will hold on Wednesday as well. But several roads, including portions of the Chandigarh-Manali route, remained blocked due to landslides and snowfall.

Apart from the rescue of the entire group of trekkers from the Indian Institute of -Technology-Roorkee, the IAF also rescued a German couple trapped in a blizzard while trekking from Ringdum to Dibling near Lahaul-Spiti. The IAF has sent three helicopter­s to Himachal, and the Centre has assured more choppers if needed, chief minister Jai Ram Thakur said.

They are being deployed to rescue over 500 people still stranded in Lahaul-Spiti. About 300 of them were trapped in Baralacha area.

DHARAMSHAL­A: As the rains hit the pause button in the hill state, as many as 50 IIT-students on a trek in Himachal Pradesh’s Lahaul valley were rescued by Indian Air Force helicopter­s, while over 500 people remain stranded in other areas in Lahaul and Spiti district, officials said on Tuesday.

Rescue operations in Kullu and Lahaul-Spiti districts were on in full swing on Tuesday. Teams of the Border Roads Organisati­on (BRO) and district administra­tion rescued 300 stranded people from Killing Sarai in Lahaul and Spiti district along the Manali-Leh highway, later they were shifted to a nearby BRO camp, officials said.

An official informed that another team of rescuers was on its way to Bharatpur in LahaulSpit­i where 70 people, including foreign tourists, are stranded.

As many as five people, including three women, who were stranded at Patsio, a camp at the foot of 4890-metre Baralacha La mountain pass, were rescued by an IAF’s MI8 helicopter. Five doctors from Jaipur have also been rescued and reached Manali.

A team of six trekkers from New Delhi and Shimla is missing in Kinnaur district, officials said. A rescue operation will be launched on Wednesday.

An official said at least three hundred vehicles, including buses, taxis, trucks, private cars and bikes, are stranded from Koksar to Keylong in the district.

A group of 45 students of IITRoorkee, five Indian born US nationals and two German trekkers were rescued on Tuesday in a joint operation by the district administra­tion and the BRO, officials said. They were stranded in Lahaul valley as landslides triggered by heavy snow damaged the road links to Manali.

The IAF will start airlifting the stranded people, comprising locals and tourists on Wednesday morning. They will be brought to Manali and Kullu towns. They have been stranded for the past two-three days at various locations in and around district headquarte­rs Keylong after the onset of heavy snow that hampered road links. All are safe and have been provided accommodat­ion and eatables, officials said.

“Nearly 45 students of IITRoorkee were taken to an army base camp at Sissu from where they were brought to Manali via Rohtang tunnel,” an official said.

He said most of the stranded people were brought to Keylong, some 121 km from Manali, and from there would be either airlifted by the IAF or brought to Manali by road on Wednesday.

However, there is no whereabout­s of nine researcher­s from Kolkata who have been stranded somewhere near 5480-metre Gangstang glacier.

Lahaul-Spiti administra­tion has been trying to establish contact with them, officials said.

STUDENTS STRANDED IN CHAMBA SAFE

Over 800 students and their teachers, who had gone to Chamba district to participat­e in a sports competitio­n, are stranded in a remote Holi area of tribal Bharmour sub-division due to landslides. The stranded include 399 boys and 417 girls, besides their teachers and other staff.

Prithi Pal Singh, additional district magistrate (ADM) Bharmour, said, “All the students are safe. They are lodged at Government School, Holi.”

The villagers and administra­tive officials are taking care of their food and other requiremen­ts. A doctor has also been

deployed for their health checkups, he said, adding that the administra­tion has pressed men and machinery to clear the road.

MET PREDICTS DRY WEATHER

The Indian meteorolog­ical department (IMD) on Tuesday predicted dry weather for the state from Wednesday onwards. The monsoon activity, which was vigorous in the state on Monday, remained less active on Tuesday and the weather will generally remain dry from Wednesday onwards, said director of Shimla MeT Centre Manmohan Singh.

TRAFFIC RESTORED PARTIALLY

Meanwhile, the traffic from Mandi to Kullu was opened after 36-hours on Tuesday morning as the water-level in Beas river receded considerab­ly. The road was blocked at Dwada near Aut in Mandi district after river water spilled onto the road on Sunday.

Traffic to picturesqu­e tourist

resort Manali was also restored partially on Tuesday, a day after all major road links snapped due to landslides triggered by heavy rains, officials said.

However, the administra­tion has advised the motorists to travel towards Manali only in case of emergency. “The traffic was partially restored through a narrow link road. Only small vehicles have been allowed. Chances of more landslides are high. The national highway between Kullu and Manali is still blocked at various places,” subdivisio­nal magistrate Raman Gharsanghi said.

CM TAKES STOCK OF SITUATION

Meanwhile, CM Jai Ram Thakur visited Kullu to take stock of the rehabilita­tion and rescue operations.

He also took an aerial survey of the Lahaul valley up to Chandertal to access the damage caused by untimely snow.

 ?? DEEPAK SANSTA / HT ?? An uprooted tree fell on a car near Kumar House in Shimla on Tuesday.
DEEPAK SANSTA / HT An uprooted tree fell on a car near Kumar House in Shimla on Tuesday.

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