Rescuers search for missing as Kashmir avalanche toll tops 200 (Agencies) Updated: 2005-02-23 13:56
Army and civilian rescuers were braving icy conditions and harsh Himalayan
winds to search for survivors of devastating snowslides in Indian Kashmir as the
death toll crossed 200, officials and witnesses said.
"The rescue operation is continuing despite cold winds and teeth-chattering
cold," said a police official in Qazigund, 80 kilometers (50 miles) south of the
summer capital Srinagar, where relief operations are being coordinated.
The town in Anantnag district is about 10 kilometers (six miles) short of a
string of hamlets flattened by weekend snow avalanches.
Another police officer, Ashiq Bukhara, said on Wednesday that 176 bodies
had been recovered from the Anantnag district since the weekend avalanches.
Police said another 50 people were killed in snowslides in the neighbouring
districts of Doda and Poonch, taking the overall death toll since the weekend to
226. In all 254 people have died in avalanches in the past two weeks.
Basheer Khan, an administrator in Anantnag district, said some 74 persons had
been rescued so far by the army and police, backed by civilian volunteers.
One of the rescuers, Ghulam Mohammed Wagay, said the village of Waltingo had
been flattened by the snow.
"Some bodies have been buried, some are lying inside a mosque and others lie
scattered on the snow. The entire village ... is devastated. We see flattened
houses there and frozen bodies," Wagay told AFP by telephone from the village.
Another rescuer, Mohammed Latif, said rescue operations were being carried
out by civilian volunteers alone in the village, where snow was stacked up for
almost four metres (12 feet).
Army spokesman Lieutenant Colonel V.K. Batra said those trapped in their
houses may have some chance of survival.
"But for those buried directly in the snow, the chances of survival are
bleak," he said.
Officials are reluctant to speculate on how many people are still missing but
civilian volunteers say they believe the number to be around 300.
"I and other volunteers were the first to reach the hamlets and I can tell
you more than 300 people are still missing," said one volunteer, Manzoor Ahmed,
who said most of the victims are from the poor Gujjar shepherd community.
A senior police officer in Anantnag said some areas were still cut off and
had yet to be reached by rescuers.
He said some 1,200 residential and other non-residential structures had been
flattened by the snowslides and more than 50,000 fruit trees destroyed in
Anantnag district alone.
The leader of India's ruling Congress party Sonia Gandhi and the country's
Defence Minister Pranab Mukherjee were scheduled to visit Kashmir Wednesday to
assess the damage, officials said.
The two were to make an aerial survey of the devastated hamlets, they said.
The Indian army has warned that fresh avalanches are possible as the snow
begins to melt and has urged mountain-dwellers to flee their homes.
"People living in higher reaches must vacate before they're overtaken by
tragedy," Major General Raj Mehta, a senior Indian army officer in the Kashmir
valley, told reporters.
Authorities in Srinagar overnight restored power supply to hospitals,
government buildings and a few suburbs but most of the Kashmir valley remained
without electricity for the sixth consecutive day.
The weekend snowfall, the heaviest in two decades, severed telephone and
power lines and closed all roadlinks inside the valley.
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