In India, the rescue of 40 workers stranded in a tunnel is interrupted

A loud crack occurred Friday evening and raised fears that the ceiling could collapse. Work to drill through tons of earth and rock to reach workers has been suspended. Rescuers communicate with the trapped workers, all of whom are alive, using radios.

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Police and Indian authorities on November 17, 2023, in front of the entrance to the tunnel under construction in Uttarkashi, in the state of Uttarakhand (India), where 40 workers are stuck.  (AFP)

A loud cracking noise occurred Friday evening and “created panic in the tunnel”. The rescue of 40 workers, stuck for almost a week in a tunnel under construction in northern India, was interrupted on Saturday, November 18, as a precaution, after new debris fell. Operations were halted due to the possibility of a “new collapse”said the government highways and infrastructure company in a press release.

Rescuers are working to clear debris from a road tunnel under construction in the northern Himalayan state of Uttarakhand after part of the tunnel workers were building collapsed on Sunday . As of Saturday morning, work on drilling tons of earth and rock to reach the workers was still suspended, a senior local official, Abhishek Ruhela, told AFP. But “apart from drilling, other useful work is underway”added Abhishek Ruhela.

Food sent through a pipe

Rescuers announced Friday that they had dug less than half the distance to reach the men. After the first drill failed, a replacement machine was brought aboard an Air Force C-130 Hercules military plane on Wednesday, but it then hit a rock. The objective is to introduce a steel pipe of approximately 90 centimeters in diameter through which the workers, all of whom are still alive, can be evacuated.

Rescuers communicate with the trapped men using radios. Food, water, oxygen and medicine were also sent to workers via a 15-centimeter-wide pipe. But workers stuck in a 400m-long space since November 12 are desperate, Indian media reported. “We continue to send messages to find out about their state of health,” said Mohammed Rizwan, a member of the rescue team quoted by the Times of India. “But everyone has only one question: ‘When are you going to get us out?'”


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