Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Class 10 student drowns while going to school in J&K

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BHADARWAH: A 16-year-old boy studying in Class 10 got washed away in flash floods while crossing a stream on his way to school in Jammu and Kashmir’s Doda district on Tuesday, officials said.

Raja Owais, who was going to appear in the first-term examinatio­n, drowned in Chinyass nullah (stream) in Bhalessa area on Tuesday morning, Bhadarwah ASP Rajinder Singh said, adding that a police party from Gandoh immediatel­y rushed to the spot and started rescue operations. After hectic search, body was fished out from the stream and handed over to boy’s kin.

Meanwhile, the district authoritie­s ordered closure of all schools for the day as a precaution­ary measure.

THE CHALLENGE

Retrieving the bodies from the glacier is a huge challenge, given the terrain of the glacier and the inclement weather conditions.

The point at Dhaka glacier where the bodies were spotted is nearly 17,600 feet above the sea level. The wreckage is lying between 16,500 feet and 18,000 feet, says Kanwar Singh Kanwar, a mountainee­r at the Atal Bihari Mountainee­ring Institute, Manali, who was part of the team that first sighted a soldier’s body in 2003.

It takes about four days from Manali to reach Dhaka glacier.

Most of the time, the glacier remains covered with fog and and finding the wreckage could be difficult. Also the strong winds make it impossible to fly small planes or choppers in the region to airlift the remains.

“Climbing the summit is difficult due to the steep gradient,” says Rajiv Rawat.

Indian army’s 7th Dogra regiment had initiated an operation to recover the bodies from the glacier in 2005, but the expedition was called off due to the tough terrain.

The Himachal Pradesh government has no plans to launch any expedition to retrieve the bodies from the glacier. “So far the army has not conveyed anything to us about the body found at the glacier. For now, we have no plans,” said additional chief secretary, Home, B K Aggarwal.

THE SIGHTING

A team comprising 11 mountainee­rs of Oil and Natural Gas Corporatio­n Ltd (ONGC) and Indian Mountainee­ring Federation was conducting a cleanup expedition at Chanderbag­ha 13 peak when they chanced upon a corpse and some wreckage.

Rajiv Rawat, a mountainee­ring instructor at Nehru institute of Mountainee­ring in Uttarkashi, says they were all taken aback when a member of the team stumbled upon a hand jutting out from the snow. “On a closer look, we found a corpse in army uniform. We had read about the plane crash, so we figured that the body is of a missing soldier.”

The plane belonging to IAF’S 25 squadron based in Chandigarh was going to Leh when it encountere­d inclement weather, and the pilot decided to return to Chandigarh. Carrying 102 passengers, including the crew and 98 army personnel, the plane was at a height of over 13050 feet on the Rohtang Pass when it made the last contact with Chandigarh air traffic control.

The missing plane has been one of the biggest mysteries of the Indian military aviation, giving rise to several myths, one of them being that the plane had strayed into Pakistan and the soldiers had been taken prisoners. The IAF had conducted a court of Inquiry but could not ascertain the exact cause for the air crash .

A soldier’s corpse was first sighted in 2003 by team of mountainee­rs from Atal Bihari Institute of Mountainee­ring in Manali. A soldier named Beli Ram’s body was later recovered. This prompted the Indian army to launch an operation “Punur Uthan ” to recover the mortal remains of the missing soldiers but it abandoned it due to inclement weather. Of the total 102 missing men, the army has been able to recover only three bodies.

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