200 stranded tourists evacuated from Sikkim's Lachung
The tourists were evacuated via Chungthang and taken to Mangan town from where the vehicles have been arranged by the Transport department to take them to Gangtok
PTI
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Stranded tourists being evacuated in rain-hit Sikkim's Chungthang in Mangan district on Tuesday. PHOTO: PTI
Gangtok, 18 June
More than 200 tourists have been evacuated while around
1,000 are still stranded in Lachung in Sikkim's landslide-hit Mangan district,
a senior police officer said on Tuesday.
The tourists were evacuated via Chungthang and taken to
Mangan town from where the vehicles have been arranged by the Transport
department to take them to Gangtok, Superintendent of Police (SP) Sonam Detchu
Bhutia said.
Around 150 stranded tourists were evacuated on Tuesday while
64 were evacuated on Monday from North Sikkim's Lachung and moved to Mangan
town, officials said. The district administration along with Border Roads
Organisation (BRO), State Disaster Response Force (SDRF), National Disaster
Response Force (NDRF) and other volunteers are taking the stranded tourists to
safer grounds, he said.
More tourists are likely to be evacuated and moved to safer
places as the day progresses, he said. The district administration had to set
up log bridges over the slides to facilitate movement by foot and by vehicles
where roads were motorable, they said.
Incessant rains since June 12 wreaked havoc in Mangan,
causing multiple landslides, and severing connectivity to most parts of the
district. Due to the blockage of various roads at several locations, around
1,200 tourists got stranded in Lachung town, officials said.
At least six people have been killed in Sikkim due to
landslides triggered by heavy rain over the past few days. The natural calamity
has also damaged properties and disrupted power and food supplies and mobile
networks in several areas, officials said.
The situation became grave after the collapse of the newly
constructed suspension bridge at Sanklang as it was the main connection to
North Sikkim and Dzongu, they said. "Responding to the natural disaster by
overcoming severe weather conditions and heavy rainfall in the region, the BRO
launched restoration efforts by mobilising huge manpower and machinery to
restore connectivity to North Sikkim at the earliest," a statement said.
"Swift and efficient response by a brave team of 758
BRTF under Project Swastik once again demonstrated their selfless commitment,
resilience and determination in restoring vital connectivity and rescue of
stranded tourists from North Sikkim," it added.
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