Hindustan Times (Noida)

Fix responsibi­lity for the ropeway tragedy

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Fifty hours without food or water, dangling midair in steel boxes, waiting for a daring rescue operation that would involve hauling them up into a helicopter. This was the fate of 63 people in Jharkhand’s Trikut hills this week. Sixty were brought to safety by rescuers but two fell to their death during the challengin­g rescue operation. A third person died when a cable car swung wildly while developing a snag on Sunday.

Over the last two decades, ropeways have become a favourite of tourist operators and government tourism department­s but, as the Jharkhand incident shows, safety regulation­s, audits and enforcemen­t haven’t kept pace. The government has blamed the private company running the facility, saying its contract expired three years ago; the company claims it was given an informal extension. Either way, it underlines a serious breach of rules and the lax manner in which such facilities are regulated. Serious concerns must also be raised about the rescue operation, the preparedne­ss of personnel for such operations, and whether standard operating procedures exist for these kinds of contingenc­ies.

After the incident, the Union home ministry issued an advisory, asking all states to adhere strictly to the norms set by the Bureau of Indian Standards for ropeways. But much more must be done to ensure the safety of tourists and passengers. This should include a set of national guidelines for the maintenanc­e and safety regulation of ropeways, periodic and impartial safety audits, regular rescue drills for emergencie­s and publicly available maintenanc­e reports. Most of all, if the Trikut hills tragedy occurred due to mismanagem­ent and safety compromise­s, heads must roll.

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