Hindustan Times (East UP)

A day after avalanche, four bodies spotted

Bad weather hinders rescue operation; a team of high altitude expert to arrive at the spot from Kashmir

- Kalyan Das letters@hindustant­imes.com

DEHRADUN: A day after six people, including five Indian Navy personnel, went missing after their summit of Mt Trishul was hit by an avalanche, a search and rescue team from Uttarakash­i-based Nehru Institute of Mountainee­ring (NIM) spotted four bodies in snow during an aerial inspection of the spot on Saturday.

The three-member NIM team led by its principal Col Amit Bisht had left for the spot on Friday after receiving informatio­n about the incident. On Saturday morning, they held the aerial inspection but could not leave for the spot due to inclement weather.

Bisht, who had stationed with the two other team members at a camp a few km from the spot, said, “On Friday, the team couldn’t commence the rescue operation due to bad weather. On Saturday morning, the weather condition didn’t improve but we carried an aerial inspection in a chopper during which four bodies were spotted.”

“The spot, where the bodies were seen, is at a high altitude. Plus the weather was also not suitable to enable us to move towards the spot. Hence, we are waiting for the weather to improve so that we could leave for the spot to recover the bodies,” said Bisht.

According to another official privy to the matter, a high altitude expert team has been called from Kashmir to help in the search and rescue team. “They are expected to reach Uttarakhan­d soon.”

The six people went missing after an avalanche hit their summit of Mt Trishul on Friday morning. Mount Trishul is a group of three peaks that resembles a trident the weapon of Lord Shiva in the western Kumaon Himalayas in Bageshwar district, 320 km from Dehradun.

The expedition had gone to scale the highest of the three peaks - Trishul-1 - at 7,120m.

According to the officials, the incident happened on Friday around 5 am when the team left to scale the peak from “camp-3”.

Earlier on September 24, an expedition of the army to scale Satopanth peak in Gangotri National Park, found the body of a mountainee­r on who was part of an expedition of the army sent to scale the same peak in 2005 in which few mountainee­rs had gone missing.

Satopanth peak, which is 7,075m high, is the second highest peak in Gangotri National Park situated in the Garhwal Himalayas in the state.

This is not the first time trekkers have gone missing in the state in the last three years. In September 2019, a 37-year-old Hungarian mountainee­r Peter Wittek had gone missing during an expedition to 7120-metrehigh Mount Trishul located in Garhwal Himalayas in Chamoli district. The missing mountainee­r was part of the six-member Singaporea­n-Vietnamese-Hungarian-Mauritian mountainee­ring expedition to Mount Trishul between September 13 to October 8.

In June 2019, eight mountainee­rs heading for the summit near Nanda Devi East in Uttarakhan­d’s Pithoragar­h met with an accident during an avalanche. Nanda Devi is the second-highest mountain in India.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? A search and rescue team carries out an aerial inspection of the avalanche spot on Saturday.
HT PHOTO A search and rescue team carries out an aerial inspection of the avalanche spot on Saturday.

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