
Kishtwar cloudburst: J&K CM Omar Abdullah reaches Chasoti village to assess damage
A coordinated rescue and relief operation is underway in the village where 75 people have been reported missing by their families, even as locals and witnesses claim that hundreds may have been swept away by the flash flood and buried under giant boulders, wooden logs, and rubble.
The Chief Minister, who arrived in Kishtwar on Friday evening, left for Chasoti by road early Saturday. He is accompanied by his political advisor, Nasir Aslam Wani.
A senior army officer, supervising the relief and rescue operation, briefed Mr. Abdullah at the scene about the ongoing operation. The Chief Minister was also provided with a virtual reality headset to understand the extent of damage caused by the flash floods.
Tragedy struck Chasoti — the last motorable village en route to the Machail Mata temple — around 12:25 p.m. on August 14. It flattened a makeshift market, a community kitchen site for the pilgrimage, and a security outpost.
At least 16 houses and government buildings, three temples, four water mills, a 30-meter-long bridge, and over a dozen vehicles were also damaged in the flash flood.
The annual Machail Mata Yatra, which began on July 25 and was scheduled to conclude on September 5, remained suspended for the third consecutive day on Saturday.
The 8.5-kilometre trek to the 9,500-foot-high shrine starts from Chasoti, around 90 kilometres from Kishtwar town.

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The Hindu
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