Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Dramatic struggle through mist and dark to bring back tourist’s body

- By Shelton Hettiarach­chi

Soldiers spent a night in treacherou­s terrain huddled around the body of German tourist Julia Helga, who fell to her death from World’s End trying to take a selfie, after thick mist prevented them from reaching safety.

It took the army almost two days to recover 35-year-old Ms Helga’s body and take it to the police.

Ms Helga met her death at a popular site for tourists – a steep precipice in the Horton Plains National Park surrounded by a wide sweep of spectacula­r mountain scenery.

On November 11, Julia Helga and a friend, Niketh Rebiya, visited World’s End. Ms. Helga walked to the edge of the precipice to take a photograph of herself against the backdrop of the mountains. As she stood at the edge the ground crumbled away beneath her feet and before her friend’s eyes she tumbled over to her death 900m down the steep 1,200 mountainsi­de.

A guide informed the office at the national park, which contacted Brigadier Ajantha Weerasoori­ya of the 3rd Sinha Regiment at Nuwara Eliya for help.

A team from the regiment headed by Major Chandana Bowala went into action. Three of the soldiers in the team had helped rescue a Dutch tourist who had fallen off World’s End on February 21, 2015 but who had survived by being caught in the branches of a tree on the slope.

Reaching World’s End at about 10am on November 11, Major Bowala’s team split into two groups, one of about 12 soldiers and a few wildlife department personnel led by the major and the other comprising six men headed by Captain Kanchana Tillekerat­ne.

“After studying the area we started scaling down at 10.30am,” Major Bowala said.

“We went down quickly. When we got to about 500m we could see her body.

“When we found the body it was about 12.30pm. The doctor who went with us examined her and pronounced her dead.”

There was no way the team could carry the body back up the precipitou­s mountain slope. The men received instructio­ns to take a circuitous path through Little World’s

End up to the Nonpareil Estate and down again to World’s End.

This was a tortuous route. “It was extremely unsafe for the body to be taken on a stretcher,” Major Bowala said. “So we tied it to a log cut from a tree and carried it.”

The weather turned against them. “By 4-5 p.m. we couldn’t even recognise each other as mist gathered,” the major recalled. “It kept on thickening. We carried the body till 10 pm. Then our communicat­ions failed.”

At about 10.30pm and, after meet- ing up with Captain Kanchana’s group, the search party decided it was too dangerous to go any further in the dark.

“All of us spent the night with the body by us. We had only water and a bottle of saline with us,” Major Bowala said.

Major Asitha Ranthilaka of the Nuwara Eliya Sinha Regiment then took up the story. “Brigadier Ajantha Wijesooriy­a arrived at the Nonpareil Estate with a few officers to help the search party to bring in the body, which weighed about 120kg,” he said. “I was with them and we arrived around midnight.

“As communicat­ions failed we used a tractor’s headlights to communicat­e with Major Bowala and his men. They responded with their torch lights. We called out and asked them to be careful with the body.”

Early on the following day Major Bowala’s men renewed their journey.

At 5.30am they met up with the team headed by Brigadier Wijesooriy­a. The men were very tired and were relieved to be given food and other essentials before struggling on with their burden. New officers joined the recue party.

“We took up the body again,” Major Ranthilaka said. “At one time we came to a narrow stretch about 80m long where the body could not be carried at all. We had to plan something. We tied ropes across the way and pushed the body along the rope.”

It took the rest of the day for the men to carefully carry Julia Helga’s body through the steep mountains to safety. At about 9.30pm on November 12 they handed the body over to the Officer in Charge of the Samanalawe­wa police station, Lawrence Fernando.

The weary party reached barracks at 4.30am on November 13.

There have been several fatal falls at World’s End, and calls have been made for a protective fence to be erected.

Most tourists are careful about their safety, said the official in charge of the Horton Plains National Park, Pradeep Kumar.

“We have decided to display notices of warning in a few languages and station a wildlife officer at the site and help the foreigners with guides,” Mr. Kumar said.

On Monday, a guard was deployed at the site.

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 ??  ?? It took the army almost two days to recover 35-year-old Ms Helga’s body and take it to the police Station.
It took the army almost two days to recover 35-year-old Ms Helga’s body and take it to the police Station.
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