logo
India avalanche rescue operation ends as eighth and final body found

India avalanche rescue operation ends as eighth and final body found

Al Jazeera02-03-2025

Rescuers recovered the eighth and final body from the site of an avalanche in a remote area of northern India, the army has said, marking the end of a marathon operation in subzero temperatures.
More than 50 workers were submerged under snow and debris after the avalanche hit a construction camp on Friday near Mana village on the border with Tibet in the Himalayan state of Uttarakhand.
Authorities had revised down the number of workers on site at the time of the avalanche from 55 to 54 after one worker, previously believed to be buried, was found to have safely made his way home before the avalanche hit.
By Saturday, rescuers had managed to pull out 50 people, but four later succumbed to their injuries, according to an Indian army statement.
By Sunday, rescue teams had recovered the remaining bodies, the army said, adding that they had used a drone-based detection system and a rescue dog to assist in its search operations.
Many of those trapped were migrant labourers working on a highway expansion project covering a 50km (31-mile) stretch from Mana, the last Indian village before the China border, to Mana Pass.
They were living on site in steel containers considered stronger than tents and capable of withstanding harsh weather.
As the ground beneath them shook, the container that construction worker Anil and his colleagues were in began to slide down.
'At first we did not understand what was happening, but when we looked out of the window of the containers, we saw piles of snow all around,' Anil, 20, told the AFP news agency.
He said that the roofs of the containers began bending inwards.
'The way we were engulfed in snow, we had no hope of surviving,' he said, adding that being alive felt 'like a dream'.
His colleague Vipan Kumar thought 'this was the end' when he found himself unable to move as he struggled for air under the thick layer of snow.
'I heard a loud roar, like thunder … before I could react, everything went dark,' he told the Times of India newspaper.
The ecologically fragile Himalayan region, increasingly affected by global warming, is prone to avalanches and flash floods.
In 2021, nearly 100 people died in Uttarakhand when a huge chunk of a glacier fell into a river, triggering flash floods.
Devastating monsoon floods and landslides in 2013 killed 6,000 people and led to calls for a review of development projects in the state.
In 2022, an avalanche also killed 27 trainee mountaineers in Uttarakhand, while a glacier that burst in 2021 triggered a flash flood and left more than 200 people dead.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

30 killed in India's northeast as rains trigger floods, landslides
30 killed in India's northeast as rains trigger floods, landslides

Qatar Tribune

time4 days ago

  • Qatar Tribune

30 killed in India's northeast as rains trigger floods, landslides

At least 30 people have died in India's northeast after relentless monsoon rains caused floods and landslides over the weekend, Indian officials and media reports say. Authorities on Sunday said at least eight people were killed in Assam state and nine more in neighbouring Arunachal Pradesh, many of them buried under earth and debris dislodged by the torrential downpour. Three members of one family were killed in a mudslide in Assam's Guwahati, officials said, as heavy rains led to flooding in many areas of the city, leading to long power outages and prompting authorities to shut schools and colleges on Saturday. Authorities disconnected electricity in several areas to reduce the risk of electrocution, Assam's Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma said. In Mizoram state, five people lost their lives in a landslide, while six others died in Meghalaya state. Officials in Nagaland and Tripura states also confirmed two deaths. Meghalaya's Chief Minister Conrad K Sangma ordered emergency teams to stay vigilant, 'especially in landslide-prone and low-lying areas', he warned in a public statement. The Indian Army launched a large-scale rescue effort in Manipur state, evacuating hundreds. 'People have been shifted to safer places,' the army said. 'Food, water and essential medicines were provided.' The downpour has continued for three straight days, and India's weather agency has forecast more heavy rains in the region in the coming days as it issued a red alert for several northeastern districts. Rivers across the region, including the Brahmaputra, which originates in the Himalayas and flows through India into Bangladesh, have breached their banks, submerging vast areas and cutting off access to many communities. Floods and landslides are common during India's June-to-September monsoon season, which is vital for agriculture but often deadly. Dozens of people die each year as rainfall overwhelms fragile infrastructure across the world's most populous country. Last month, Mumbai was deluged by rain nearly two weeks before its usual beginning, the earliest monsoon arrival in the capital city of the western state of Maharashtra in over two decades, according to meteorological officials. Scientists say climate change is altering weather patterns across South Asia, but the precise effects on the monsoon system remain unclear. (Agencies)

Rains add to misery in quake-hit Myanmar as death toll rises to 3,471
Rains add to misery in quake-hit Myanmar as death toll rises to 3,471

Al Jazeera

time06-04-2025

  • Al Jazeera

Rains add to misery in quake-hit Myanmar as death toll rises to 3,471

Heavy rains have lashed parts of earthquake-hit Myanmar, complicating relief efforts and raising the risk of disease as the death toll from the powerful quakes that struck the country on March 28 rose to at least 3,471. Aid workers in the hard-hit city of Mandalay, near the epicentre of the earthquake, said on Sunday that rains and winds hit tent camps in the area overnight and in the morning, soaking survivors and their belongings. More bouts of rain were expected later in the day, while temperatures were also forecast to climb to 37 degrees Celsius (98 degrees Fahrenheit). 'The weather is very extreme,' Tun Tun, a specialist with the United Nations Development Programme, told the AFP news agency. Aid agencies have warned the combination of unseasonable rains and extreme heat could cause outbreaks of disease, including cholera, among quake survivors, who are camping in the open. Rainfall hits Sagaing on April 6 Rain poured down again in Sagaing at around 6 am on April 6. On the evening of April 5, unseasonal rain fell in Sagaing, Mandalay and Kyaukse towns, causing further difficulties for earthquake victims on the roads. — Eleven Myanmar (@ElevenMyanmar) April 6, 2025The magnitude 7.7 earthquake hit a wide swath of Myanmar, home to 50 million people, causing significant damage to six regions and states, including the capital, Naypyidaw. It left many areas without power, telephone or mobile phone connections, and damaged roads and bridges, making the full extent of the devastation hard to assess. It also worsened an already dire humanitarian crisis triggered by the country's civil war that has internally displaced more than three million people and left nearly 20 million in need, according to the UN. State media in the military-led country now say the earthquake has caused 3,471 deaths and injured 4,671 people, while 214 remain missing. It has damaged some 5,223 buildings, 1,824 schools, 4,817 pagodas and temples, 167 hospitals and clinics, 169 bridges, 198 dams and 184 sections of the country's main highway. Damage has been particularly severe in the city of Sagaing near the epicentre, as well as in Mandalay, Myanmar's second-largest city. UN aid chief Tom Fletcher, who is in Mandalay, described the scale of the damage as 'epic' and said survivors, who are 'traumatised and fearful', need food, water, shelter and electricity urgently. In a video posted to X, Fletcher noted the quake had brought devastation to communities that were already in crisis. 'It's a compounding crisis,' he said. 'It's earthquake, on top of conflict, on top of huge existing need.' He noted that aftershocks continued in the region more than a week after the earthquake. The United States Geological Survey said a magnitude 4.7 quake struck south of Mandalay late on Friday. A week after Mandalay earthquake, with devastating damage and aftershocks strong, this is a traumatised and fearful community. We are determined to save survivors and help them rebuild: we need the world to share that commitment. — Tom Fletcher (@UNReliefChief) April 6, 2025Though Myanmar's military government, led by Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, who seized power in a coup in February 2021 overthrowing the civilian government of Aung San Suu Kyi, declared a temporary ceasefire on Wednesday, the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights said on Friday that the army was restricting aid in areas that did not back its rule. The UN agency also said it was investigating reported military attacks against opponents, including after the ceasefire. Free Burma Rangers, a relief group, told the Reuters news agency on Saturday that the military had dropped bombs in Karenni and Shan states on Thursday and Friday despite the ceasefire announcement, killing at least five people. The victims included civilians, according to the group's founder, David Eubank, who said there had been at least seven such military attacks since the ceasefire. There was no immediate comment from the military on the allegations. Myanmar's neighbours, such as China, India and Southeast Asian nations, have dispatched relief supplies and rescuers over the past week to the country, while the US – which was until recently the world's top humanitarian donor – has pledged at least $9m to support earthquake-affected communities. Current and former US officials say the dismantling of the country's foreign aid programme has affected its response. Three US Agency for International Development workers who had travelled to Myanmar after the quake were told they were being let go, Marcia Wong, a former senior USAID official, told Reuters. 'This team is working incredibly hard, focused on getting humanitarian aid to those in need. To get news of your imminent termination – how can that not be demoralising?' Wong said. The three USAID workers have been sleeping on the streets in the earthquake zone, Wong said, adding that their terminations would take effect in a few months. In neighbouring Thailand, meanwhile, authorities said the country's death toll from the quake had risen to 24. Of those, 17 died at the site of an under-construction skyscraper in the capital, Bangkok. Another 77 are still missing.

Japan deploys 2,000 firefighters to tackle worst forest blaze in decades
Japan deploys 2,000 firefighters to tackle worst forest blaze in decades

Al Jazeera

time03-03-2025

  • Al Jazeera

Japan deploys 2,000 firefighters to tackle worst forest blaze in decades

More than 2,000 firefighters, backed by military helicopters, are battling Japan's biggest forest fire in three decades, as the blaze burns thousands of hectares of land every day. Officials on Monday said about 4,600 residents remain under evacuation advisories as the fire rages in the northern Iwate region, killing at least one person last week. The fire, which broke out near the city of Ofunato, follows record low rainfall in the area and last year's hottest summer on record across Japan, as climate change pushes up temperatures worldwide. 'Although it is inevitable that the fire will spread to some extent, we will take all possible measures to ensure there will be no impact on people's homes,' Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said in parliament. The fire has consumed approximately 5,200 acres (2,100 hectares) of land since it started on Thursday, the country's Fire and Disaster Management Agency (FDMA) said on Monday. 'We are still examining the size of the affected area, but it is the biggest since the 1992 wildfire' in Kushiro, FDMA spokesman Hokkaido told the AFP news agency on Saturday. Firefighters from 14 Japanese regions, including units from Tokyo, were tackling the blaze, with 16 helicopters – including from the military – trying to douse the flames. It is estimated to have damaged 84 buildings by Sunday, although details were still being assessed, the FDMA said. About 2,000 people have left the area to stay with friends or relatives, while more than 1,200 evacuated to shelters, according to officials. Footage from Ofunato on national broadcaster NHK showed orange flames close to buildings and white smoke billowing into the air. While the number of wildfires in Japan has decreased since the 1970s, according to government data, the country still recorded about 1,300 such incidents in 2023, concentrated in the February to April period when the air dries and winds strengthen. Ofunato saw just 2.5mm (0.1 inches) of rainfall in February – breaking the previous record low for the month of 4.4mm in 1967 and below the usual average of 41mm. Some types of extreme weather have a well-established link with climate change, such as heatwaves or heavy rainfall. Other phenomena like droughts, snowstorms, tropical storms and forest fires can result from a combination of complex factors.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store