Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

Demolition picks pace in sinking Joshimath

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Amit Bathla and Ajay Ramola

JOSHIMATH/MUSSOORIE: Demolition crews worked gingerly on Saturday to bring down the two precarious­ly standing hotels in Joshimath, which will take at least 7-10 days, officials said, adding that there are 147 buildings determined to be unsafe due to the shifting ground.

A group of 20 labourers worked on bringing down Malari Inn and Mount View, cutting down tin roofs with gas cutters and removing the wooden windows and doors, the officials said. The dismantlin­g is being carried out in two shifts.

Five personnel from the state disaster relief force in each hotel also assisted in the dismantlin­g process, said Harak Singh, an inspector with SDRF. National Disaster Response Force teams were also present on the spot. A team from Central Building Research Institute supervised the mechanical demolition.

“We began the dismantlin­g process at 7.30am and will end at around 6pm. Our 10 personnel (five in each hotel) are anchoring the 20 workers involved in the demolition. We are breaking walls and roofs using hammers and debris is initially thrown on the road. It will be picked up by the trucks after the operation for the day ends,” said Harak Singh.

The administra­tion had begun the process of razing hotel Malari Inn on Thursday and the disrelief mantling process of the adjoining damaged Mount View began the next day over fears that if one hotel is demolished at a time, the other would topple over. The two badly damaged hotels have been dangerousl­y leaning against each other due to land subsidence in the town.

As of Saturday, 760 buildings in nine wards of the town had developed cracks and 147 were declared unsafe from where families were shifted to safer locations.

According to local residents, the first signs of subsidence had appeared in October 2021 but the situation aggravated in December 2022. In the first week of January, various areas of the town experience­d sudden sinking and several houses developed major cracks too. Garhwal commission­er Sushil Kumar on Saturday visited camps and inspected a relief material storage centre.

According to families that live in damaged houses in Karanpraya­g of Chamoli district, cracks are getting wider each day but they haven’t been shifted by authoritie­s. Bhagwati Prasad Sati, (76), one of the affected residents from Bahuguna Nagar, said: “My whole house is in shambles, but no notice has been served to me to evacuate. It is unjustifie­d and the authoritie­s are putting our lives in danger.”

Darban Singh, whose home has also developed cracks, said: “I have not been served a notice yet and will only shift elsewhere only after receiving compensati­on.

Surendra Deb, a revenue official of Karanpraya­g said, said not all residents are being asked to move. “We have served notices to eight families to vacate the houses that have become unsafe to live in..”

Over ₹1.87cr interim aid provided to 125 families

An interim relief of ₹1.87 crore has been provided to 125 affected families in Joshimath so far, disaster management secretary Ranjit Kumar Sinha said on Saturday.

“In view of the cold wave conditions, the district administra­tion has also made arrangemen­ts for bonfires at 10 places in Joshimath municipali­ty,” he said, adding that the Central Building Research Institute has been told to assist in building prefabrica­ted houses for the displaced families.

 ?? HT PHOTOS ?? As of Saturday, 760 buildings in nine wards of Uttarakhan­d’s Joshimath town developed cracks.
HT PHOTOS As of Saturday, 760 buildings in nine wards of Uttarakhan­d’s Joshimath town developed cracks.

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