Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

HEARD PEOPLE SCREAMING AT US TO COME OUT OF TUNNEL: SURVIVOR

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com PTI

Rakesh Dhimri, a 42-year-old resident of Raini village in Uttarakhan­d’s Chamoli district, was sipping on his tea on an idle Sunday morning around 10am when he heard a loud sound of angry waters gushing in.

Alarmed, he got up from his chair and went outside his house to enquire. What he saw rekindled his memories of the deadly Kedarnath floods of 2013 that killed about 5,700 people. “I and my family members were just praying to god to protect us,” Dhimri said.

“God has saved me…I cannot believe I am alive,” said a worker rescued at the Tapovan tunnel Chamoli where flash floods wreaked havoc. “We were working inside a tunnel and got no time to respond. I was saved as I hooked myself into one corner,” he said.

Lal Bahadur was one of 12 people rescued in Tapovan. They had lost hope of survival when one of them found his mobile phone network working, helping them contact authoritie­s who rescued them. “We heard people screaming at us to come out of the tunnel but before we could react, a sudden gush of water and heavy silt swamped upon us,” said Bahadur, who was trapped in the tunnel for over seven hours.

JOSHIMATH: They had lost hope of survival when one of them found his mobile phone network working, helping them contact the authoritie­s who rescued them from an undergroun­d tunnel at Tapovan in Uttarakahn­d’s Chamoli where flash floods wreaked havoc following a glacier burst. “We heard people screaming at us to come out of the tunnel but before we could react, a sudden gush of water and heavy silt swamped upon us,” rescued Tapovan power project worker Lal Bahadur said.

He, along with 11 of his other colleagues, was rescued by the Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) from an undergroun­d tunnel in Uttarakhan­d’s Chamoli district on Monday evening.

According to officials, they remained stuck there for about seven hours, from around 10 am to 5 pm, till the last man was evacuated by rescuers.

The ITBP provided their recorded video accounts to the media.

They are now being treated at an ITBP hospital in Joshimath, about 25 km from the incident spot. This is also the base of the ITBP’s Battalion No. 1, tasked with guarding the Line of Actual Control (LAC) with China that runs along the state.

At least 11 bodies have been recovered while 202 are still missing since the disaster struck in the upper reaches of Chamoli district, according to the ITBP.

“We were 300 metres deep in the tunnel when the water gushed in. We got trapped. The ITBP rescued us,” Nepal resident Basant said.

Another unidentifi­ed worker who hails from Dhak village in Chamoli and worked at the Tapovan project said as the water gushed in, the only thing they could do was to lunge onto the crown of the tunnel.

“We lost hope...but then we saw some light and felt some air to breathe...suddenly one of us found he had network on his mobile and then he called up our general manager informing him about our situation,” the man said from the hospital bed.

Officials said the project GM subsequent­ly informed the local authoritie­s who requisitio­ned ITBP rescuers to save them.

The ITBP teams, armed with ropes, pulleys and carabiners, rappelled down a steep slope and brought out these men from the narrow snout of the tunnel on Sunday evening.

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