Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Highway remains shut, 1,400 vehicles still stuck

Heavy rains for the past two days had triggered landslides at nearly three dozen places on the highway in Ramban and Udhampur

- HT Correspond­ent letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

JAMMU: The 270km long Jammu-Srinagar national highway, the only all-weather surface link that connects Kashmir with the outside world, remained closed for the third consecutiv­e day on Thursday.

Heavy rains for the past two days had triggered landslides at nearly three dozen places on the highway in Ramban and Udhampur districts.

“Restoratio­n work and debris clearance operations are on in Udhampur and Ramban districts but it will take time to restore the highway and allow traffic movement,” said a traffic police officer.

He informed that work on war-footing was underway in Samroli area where a hill collapsed on Wednesday, washing away around 350metres of the highway.

“Three JCB machines, stone breakers and excavators are working round-the-clock. On Thursday, the agencies concerned had to conduct controlled blasting to remove big boulders. Given the circumstan­ces, the highway will not be restored by this evening and we may have to wait for one more

day,” he added.

However, traffic police on Thursday cleared over 600 Kashmir-bound stranded vehicles after road-clearance operations picked up momentum following improvemen­t in weather conditions.

Efforts are on to clear the remaining 1,400 stranded vehicles on the highway that has been shut since Tuesday.

Senior superinten­dent of police, traffic national highway, Shabir Ahmad Malik said, “Over 600 stranded trucks and passenger vehicles between Panthiyal and Banihal were cleared and they reached their destinatio­ns in Kashmir while efforts are on to clear the remaining 1,400 vehicles.”

“Road clearance operation is on at a war-footing at the remaining six locations, including Dewal bridge near Samroli in Udhampur district and Kela Morh, Sita Ram Passi Marog and Battery Cheshma in Ramban district,” said Malik.

Ramban deputy commission­er Mussarat Islam said 25 out of 30 landslides and mudslides on the highway have been cleared.

“The restoratio­n work in Banihal-Ramban sector at six affected stretches is under way. The restoratio­n of these stretches is expected by Thursday evening,” traffic officials said.

He, however, said once the highway was restored, the

stranded vehicles will be given priority to reach to their respective destinatio­ns before allowing fresh traffic. The Mughal road, another link connecting the twin Poonch-Rajouri districts of Jammu region with South Kashmir’s Shopian district, was also cleared for traffic after remaining closed for two days owing to landslides triggered by heavy rains.

The Met department has forecast fair to partly cloudy weather on Thursday evening.

“A brief spell of light to moderate rain and thundersto­rm can’t be ruled out at isolated places. Overall, there’s no forecast of any major rainfall activity till ending June,” said an official.

 ?? ANI ?? Restoratio­n work underway near the Dewal Bridge on the Jammu-Srinagar National Highway, in Udhampur district on Thursday.
ANI Restoratio­n work underway near the Dewal Bridge on the Jammu-Srinagar National Highway, in Udhampur district on Thursday.

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