At least 60 killed in Kishtwar cloudburst, 300 troops hunt for missing
The Union Territory administration has set up a control room-cum-help desk in Paddar, about 15 km from Chositi, to assist people and pilgrims.
PTI
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At least 40 of the 100 injured are critical and undergoing treatment. Photo: PTI
New Delhi/Kishtwar, 15 Aug
Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke with Jammu and Kashmir
Chief Minister Omar Abdullah and Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha on Friday and
assured them of all help in the wake of a cloudburst in Kishtwar district that
has killed at least 60 people and injured more than 100, officials said.
A massive flash flood triggered by the cloudburst struck the
remote mountain village of Chisoti in Kishtwar on Thursday. Authorities have so
far identified 30 of the bodies retrieved, the officials said on Friday.
Modi spoke with Abdullah and Sinha and took stock of the
situation.
Earlier, addressing an Independence-Day function at Srinagar's Bakshi Stadium, Abdullah said at least 60 people have been killed and more than 100 injured in the tragic incident. There were two Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) personnel among the deceased.
To identify the deceased, the authorities shared their
pictures through a WhatsApp group with the affected families, resulting in the
identification of 30 of them.
More than 160 people have so far been rescued and the condition
of 38 of them is said to be serious. The officials said the death toll could go
up as more people are believed to be trapped.
The Union Territory administration has set up a control
room-cum-help desk in Paddar, about 15 km from Chositi, to assist people and
pilgrims.
Five officials have been put on duty at the control room.
The numbers provided are -- 9858223125, 6006701934, 9797504078, 8492886895,
8493801381, and 7006463710.
Since the tragedy struck, the help desk has received scores
of distress calls, the officials said, adding that the authorities are trying
to trace 69 people reported missing by their families at the help desk.
"We have shared the pictures of the bodies with
them," an official said.
There are two villages ahead of the cloudburst-hit belt --
Machail and Hamori -- where hundreds of people are stranded, the officials
said, adding that their mobile phone batteries have been exhausted due to the
snapping of the power supply to the belt following the disaster.
Once contact is established, authorities will get to know the exact whereabouts of these people, they said. Fresh search operations will also dig out more victims from the debris and mud in the area, the officials said. The villagers said they had seen 10 bodies floating in the Chenab river.
Chisoti, a base camp for the annual Machail Mata Yatra, was
bustling with pilgrims when the disaster struck between 12 noon and 1 pm on
Thursday.
A large number of people had gathered there for the
pilgrimage that began on 25 July and was scheduled to end on 5 September. The
8.5-km trek to the 9,500-foot shrine begins from Chisoti, which is located
about 90 km from Kishtwar town. The yatra remained suspended for the second day
on Friday.
The floods, accompanied by mudslides and debris buried houses,
shops and vehicles.
At least 16 residential houses and government buildings,
three temples, four water mills and a 30-metre span bridge, besides more than a
dozen vehicles, were damaged in the flash floods in Chisoti and downstream, the
officials said.
The flash floods also swept away a security camp and several
vehicles parked at the bus stand. A temple in the middle of the flooded area
miraculously survived.
A langar (community kitchen) set up for the devotees bore
the brunt of the cloudburst, which caused flash floods and washed away several
structures, including shops and a security outpost.
Many vehicles at the bus stand, the starting point for the
foot journey to the Himalayan temple of Machail Mata, were severely damaged by
floodwaters and mud.
A National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) team reached
Chisoti on Friday.
"The NDRF team is joining the operation currently
underway in the village. They reached Gulabgarh late in the night,"
Kishtwar Deputy Commissioner Pankaj Sharma told PTI.
Sharma, who is supervising the operation, said choppers
could not be operated due to bad weather, so the NDRF team came by road from
Udhampur.
Two more teams are on their way and will be joining the
operation, the officials said.
The Indian Army has also inducted one more column to intensify the search-and-rescue operations, they said. Rashtriya Rifles troops have joined the operation. Five columns of 60 personnel each, totalling 300 troops, along with medical detachments of the White Knight Corps, are on the ground, working tirelessly in coordination with police, the State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) and civilian agencies to save lives and assist those in need.
Despite rains, the rescue-and-relief operations resumed
early on Friday after a night-long pause to look for survivors feared trapped
under rubble and mud.
Videos showed torrents of muddy water, silt and rubble
tearing through the steep slopes, destroying everything on the way. Houses
folded over like a pack of cards, rocks came tumbling down, blocking roads and
rescue paths.
The deputy commissioner, along with Senior Superintendent of
Police, Kishtwar, Naresh Singh, is camping in the area to oversee the
multi-agency operation on the ground.
The Jammu and Kashmir health and medical education
department has reinforced critical infrastructure to ensure optimal patient
care in the wake of the tragedy.
A health department official said a team of specialist
doctors from PGI-Chandigarh is slated to reach the Government Medical College
(GMC) in Jammu to assist in medical care and bolster critical-care
capabilities.
According to the official, critical health infrastructure
has been reinforced at a sub-district hospital close to the cloudburst site,
with an additional deployment of 13 doctors and 31 paramedics.
Senior officers of the department are stationed at Padder,
overseeing rescue and medical operations, he said, adding that the district
hospital at Kishtwar has been prepped up with the additional deployment of general
and orthopaedic surgeons, and anaesthetists from the GMC in Doda.
The GMC-Jammu is in full operational readiness with 50
dedicated disaster beds, 20 ventilator beds and five operating theatres,
another official said.
He said specialist medical teams, comprising orthopaedic
surgeons, neurosurgeons, critical-care anaesthetists and maxillofacial
consultants, are on standby. The GMC-Jammu blood bank has kept more than 200units for any exigency.
Immediately following the incident, 65 ambulances from the
health department, NHPC, Army, CRPF and 108 Emergency Service of the Jammu and
Kashmir health and medical education department were deployed for rescue and
patient transfer, the official said.
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