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UTTARKASHI: A general view shows the entrance of the under construction Silkyara road tunnel during rescue efforts for trapped workers. -- AFP photos
UTTARKASHI: A general view shows the entrance of the under construction Silkyara road tunnel during rescue efforts for trapped workers. -- AFP photos

Indian rescuers in final stretch to free 41 trapped workers

Tunnel project ‘disastrous and needs course correction’: Critics

SILKYARA TUNNEL: Indian rescuers have drilled three-quarters of the way through debris towards 41 workers trapped in a collapsed road tunnel for the past 11 days, officials said Wednesday, raising hopes of a breakthrough with diggers in the final stretch.

Engineers are working to drive a steel pipe through at least 57 meters (187 feet) of the tons of earth, concrete and rubble that has divided the trapped men from freedom since a portion of the under-construction tunnel in the northern Himalayan state of Uttarakhand collapsed 11 days ago.

Looking into the Silkyara tunnel entrance on Wednesday, an AFP journalist could see sparks flying as workers welded metal tube sections together, with the site busy as excavators and heavy trucks brought in equipment. Ambulances were on standby near the entrance, ready in the hope that the trapped men could soon be freed.

Uttarakhand chief minister Pushkar Singh Dhami said the work was on a “war footing” as he arrived at the site on Wednesday evening. “Work is being done at a fast pace”, he said in a statement, saying engineers had drilled 45 meters through the 57 meters of debris, making a sudden rapid advance after days of painfully slow progress. “If there is no blockage, we hope there could be happy news late tonight or tomorrow,” Mahmood Ahmad, a road and highways ministry official involved in the operations, told reporters at the site.

A rescue personnel welds a driller head during rescue operations for trapped constructions workers in the Uttarkashi district of India's Uttarakhand state.
A rescue personnel welds a driller head during rescue operations for trapped constructions workers in the Uttarkashi district of India's Uttarakhand state.

‘Challenging Himalayan terrain’

But a government statement also noted that “timelines provided are subject to change due to technical glitches, the challenging Himalayan terrain, and unforeseen emergencies”. Rescue efforts have been slow, complicated by falling debris as well as repeated breakdowns of crucial heavy-drilling machines.

The giant earth-boring machine last week ran into boulders, and drilling was put on hold for more than three days after a cracking sound in the roof. In case the route through the main tunnel entrance does not work, blasting and drilling have also begun from the far end of the unfinished tunnel, nearly half a kilometer (over a quarter of a mile) long. Preparations have also been made for a risky vertical shaft directly above.

On the forested hill above, rescuers have cut an entirely new track to bring heavy equipment above the men, where a machine to dig an 89-metre vertical shaft is being installed — a complex dig above the men in an area that has already suffered a collapse. The workers were seen alive for the first time on Tuesday, peering into the lens of an endoscopic camera sent by rescuers down a thin pipe through which air, food, water and electricity are being delivered.

‘High spirits’

Though trapped, they have plenty of space, with the area inside 8.5 meters high and stretching about two kilometers in length. Bhaskar Khulbe, a senior government official overseeing rescue efforts, said he had spoken to the trapped men on Wednesday morning. “All of them are in high spirits,” he said.

On Wednesday, a Hindu priest sat close to the site holding prayers for the trapped men, with rescue workers pausing briefly at a shrine erected at its entrance. The tunnel is part of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s infrastructure project aimed at cutting travel times between some of the most popular Hindu sites in the country, as well as improving access to strategic areas bordering rival China.

But experts have warned about the impact of extensive construction in Uttarakhand, large parts of which are prone to landslides. “The development model in this young, fragile mountain range has been disastrous and needs course correction,” environmental campaigner Priyadarshini Patel wrote in the Times of India on Wednesday. “Mega-projects are not what the Himalayas are about, culturally or geologically”. – AFP

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