Rescuers in India digging for 37 trapped in glacier flood

Rescuers in northern India were working Monday to rescue more than three dozen power plant workers trapped in a tunnel after part of a Himalayan glacier broke off and sent a wall of water and debris rushing down the mountain in a disaster that has left 18 people dead and 165 missing.
More than 2,000 members of the
military, paramilitary groups and police have been taking part in
search-and-rescue operations in the northern state of Uttarakhand after
Sunday’s flood, which destroyed one dam, damaged another and washed away homes
downstream.
Officials said the focus was on
saving 37 workers who are stuck inside a tunnel at one of the affected
hydropower plants. Excavators had been brought in the help with the efforts to
reach the workers, who have been out of contact since the flood.
“The tunnel is filled with debris, which has
come from the river. We are using machines to clear the way,” said H. Gurung, a
senior official of the paramilitary Indo Tibetan Border Police.
Authorities fear many more are
dead and were searching for bodies downstream using boats. They also walked
along river banks and used binoculars to scan for bodies that might have been
washed downstream.
The flood was caused when a
portion of Nanda Devi glacier snapped off Sunday morning, releasing water
trapped behind it. Experts said the disaster could be linked to global warming
and a team of scientists was flown to the site Monday to investigate exactly
happened.
The floodwater rushed down the
mountain and into other bodies of water, forcing the evacuation of many
villages along the banks of the Alaknanda and Dhauliganga rivers. Video showed
the muddy, concrete-gray floodwaters tumbling through a valley and surging into
a dam, breaking it into pieces with little resistance before roaring on
downstream. It turned the countryside into what looked like an ash-colored
moonscape.
A hydroelectric plant on the
Alaknanda was destroyed, and a plant under construction on the Dhauliganga was
damaged, said Vivek Pandey, an Indo Tibetan Border Police spokesman. Flowing
out of the Himalayan mountains, the two rivers meet before merging with the
Ganges River.
The trapped workers were at the
Dhauliganga plant, where on Sunday 12 workers were rescued from a separate
tunnel.
A senior government official told
The Associated Press that they don’t know the total number of people who were
working in the Dhauliganga project. “The number of missing people can go up or
come down,” S A Murugesan said.
Pandey said Monday that 165
workers at the two plants, not including those trapped in the tunnel, were
missing and at least 18 bodies were recovered.
Those rescued Sunday were taken to
a hospital, where they were recovering.
One of the rescued workers, Rakesh
Bhatt, told The Associated Press said they were working in the tunnel when
water rushed in.
“We thought it might be rain and that the water
will recede. But when we saw mud and debris enter with great speed, we realized
something big had happened,” he said.
Bhatt said one of the workers was
able to contact officials via his mobile phone.
“We waited for almost six hours — praying to God
and joking with each other to keep our spirits high. I was the first to be
rescued and it was a great relief,” he said.
The Himalayan area where Sunday’s
flood struck has a chain of hydropower projects on several rivers and their
tributaries. Authorities said they were able to save other power units
downstream because of timely action taken to release water by opening gates.
The floodwaters also damaged
homes, but details on the number and whether any residents were injured,
missing or dead remained unclear. Officials said they were trying to track
whether anyone was missing from villages along the two rivers.
Government officials airdropped
food packets and medicine to at least two flood-hit villages.
Many people in nearby villages
work at the Dhauliganga plant, Murugesan said, but as it was a Sunday fewer
people were at work than on a weekday,
“The only solace for us is that the casualty
from the nearby villages is much less,” he said.
Some have already started pointing
at climate change as a contributing factor given the known melting and breakup
of the world’s glaciers, though other factors such as erosion, earthquakes, a
buildup of water pressure and volcanic eruptions have also been known to cause
glaciers to collapse.
Anjal Prakash, research director and adjunct professor at the Indian School of Business who has contributed to U.N.-sponsored research on global warming, said that while data on the cause of the disaster was not yet available, “this looks very much like a climate change event as the glaciers are melting due to global warming.”