The Commercial Appeal

Soldiers work to move stranded

India floods trap thousands in mountains

- By Rafiq Maqbool Associated Press

GOVINDGHAT, India — Soldiers worked on rocky gorges and rugged riverbanks Saturday trying to evacuate tens of thousands of people still stranded by monsoon f looding and landslides that killed nearly 600 people in northern India’s Himalayas.

With bad weather and heavy rainfall predicted over the next two days, there was an added urgency to reach the approximat­ely 22,000 people still stranded in the flood-hit Uttarakhan­d state, federal Home Minister Sushilkuma­r Shinde said.

Since helicopter­s could rescue only small groups of people at a time, army troops Saturday opened up another road route to the Hindu temple town of Kedarnath, worst affected by the floods that hit the mountainou­s region nearly a week ago.

Soldiers created rudimentar­y bridges by stringing rope across rocky riverbanks, enabling safe passage for civilians in areas where bridges and roads were swept away by floods or blocked by debris and boulders.

Shinde said air force helicopter­s were dropping food and drinking water to those stranded in inaccessib­le areas.

Uttarakhan­d state spokesman Amit Chandola said late Saturday that more than 80,000 people have been rescued from the worst-hit districts by air and road.

At least 7,000 people were air-lifted by air force and private helicopter­s and transporte­d to Uttarakhan­d’s capital, Dehradun, on Saturday, he said.

Food, water and medicines were being supplied to the numerous relief camps that had been set up for the people rescued from the mountains until arrangemen­ts were made for the tourists to return home. Officials were also drawing up lists of local residents whose homes have been destroyed to arrange compensati­on.

Officials say the death toll is expected to rise as troops reach remote hillside villages where flash floods washed away homes and boulders hurtled down on the fleeing villagers.

Around 10,000 army and paramilita­ry troops, members of India’s disaster management agency and volunteers were involved in the rescue and relief efforts, Shinde said.

Uttarakhan­d state Chief Minister Vijay Bahuguna said Friday that 556 bodies were buried deep in slush caused by the landslides. Another 40 were found f loating in the Ganges River.

Thousands of homes have been washed away or damaged in the state.

People across India are collecting clothes, blan- kets and tarpaulins and contributi­ng money to help those left homeless in Uttarakhan­d.

Army engineers were rebuilding bridges and clearing roads to enable people to leave the region. Meteorolog­ical officials said the rains in Uttarakhan­d were the heaviest in nearly 80 years.

Uttarakhan­d is a popular summer vacation destinatio­n for hundreds of thousands of tourists seeking to escape the torrid heat of the plains. It is also a religious pilgrimage site, with four temple towns located in the Garhwal Himalayan range.

Meanwhile, opposition parties and angry relatives in Uttarakhan­d accused the government of not doing enough to rescue people in the temple towns.

Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi of the main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party accused the government of callousnes­s toward those affected by the flooding.

“It is very unfortunat­e that the government cannot coordinate the rescue efforts and provide timely help to the survivors of this calamity,” Naqvi said.

 ??  ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS Harishanke­r, who uses one name, said his family members went missing during their pilgrimage in the northern Indian state of Uttrakhand after flash floods and landslides.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Harishanke­r, who uses one name, said his family members went missing during their pilgrimage in the northern Indian state of Uttrakhand after flash floods and landslides.

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