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Rescuers Finally Dig Through Debris, Lay Pipes To Bring Out Workers From Tunnel

Rescuers Finally Dig Through Debris, Lay Pipes To Bring Out Workers From Tunnel

New Delhi:

Forty-one workers trapped in Uttarakhand’s Silkyari tunnel are now moments away from escaping their underground prison of 17 days, according to a tweet by Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami.

Rescue teams racing to save the 41 men have cleared the final few metres of debris – thanks to the banned manual “rat-hole”-mining technique employed after high-tech machines, or augers, failed to drill through nearly 60 metres of rock – and lay two-feet wide pipes to create an escape route, he said.

LIVE UPDATES | Uttarkashi Tunnel Rescue Operation

“As a result of immense grace of Baba Baukh Nagji (and) prayers of crores of countrymen and the tireless work of all rescue teams… the work of laying pipes in the tunnel to take out the workers has been completed. Soon all the labourer brothers will be taken out,” he tweeted Tuesday afternoon.

Officials told NDTV that National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) and emergency medical personnel with stretchers are now on standby to enter the tunnel and work their way into the collapsed cavern.

READ | How 41 Workers Got Trapped Inside Uttarakhand Tunnel For 17 Days

First a single NDRF personnel will crawl down the pipe to assess the condition of the trapped men and begin the process of bringing them out. The workers will be brought out one-by-one on a specially-modified stretcher that will be pushed down the rescue pipe and pulled up manually by the rescuers.

A temporary medical centre has been set up at the mouth of the tunnel, where each worker will be examined and given first aid, if needed, before they are prepped for transport in the ambulances.

READ | How Rat-Hole Mining, Outlawed, Saved 41 Trapped In Uttarkashi Tunnel

Visuals from the rescue site – a storm of activity over the past two weeks as battalions of tunnelling experts, disaster response teams and medical personnel work to save the 41 trapped men – showed ambulances – one for each trapped man – being taken, one-by-one, into and out of the tunnel.

READ | 41 Ambulances Lined Up Outside Tunnel To Take Workers To Hospital

These were understood be practice drills for when the workers are finally brought above ground.

When the men are rescued, a green corridor has been established to ensure each ambulance is transported to a makeshift hospital in Chinyalisaur, which is located 30 km from the tunnel site.

The medical facility has 41 oxygen-equipped beds and the necessary equipment and medicines to provide each worker with the required medical care, NDTV has been told. The workers will only be shifted to the premier All India Institute of Medical Sciences in Rishikresh if necessary.

“Rescued workers will be brought here only if medical treatment cannot be met in district hospital. At AIIMS Rishikesh, there are 20 beds in Trauma Centre and a few in the ICU,” a senior physician said.

Earlier today relatives were asked to “be prepared”; “Keep their clothes and bags ready,” officials told them, explaining that one family member would be allowed to ride in each ambulance.

READ | Keep Bags Ready”: Workers’ Families Told As Tunnel Op In Final Stretch

The final stretch of the rescue process has been completed not by the expensive drillers, or augers, like the 25-ton machine that broke down Monday, but by a manual system called “rat-hole” mining, which was banned in 2014 for being unscientific and causing increased environmental pollution.

Efforts till now have included smaller pipes being pushed through nearly 60 metres of debris to provide food, drinking water and medicines. The food supplied so far – in consultation with doctors and dieticians – has included khichdi and fruits, as well as pulao and mater paneer. 

READ | Trapped Uttarakhand Workers Get Veg Pulao, Matar Paneer For Dinner

The smaller pipes have also been used to maintain communication with the workers; this includes the use of landlines that are used twice daily to allow the men to speak to anxious family members.

The rescue process has been monitored by Prime Minister Narendra Modi; his Principal Secretary PK Mishra is at the op site and was accompanied by Uttarakhand Chief Secretary Sukhbir Singh Sandhu.

Located 30 km from Uttarkashi and 139 km drive from state capital Dehradun, the Silkyara tunnel is an integral part of the centre’s ambitious (and controversial) Char Dham all-weather road project.

With input from agencies

NDTV is now available on WhatsApp channels. Click on the link to get all the latest updates from NDTV on your chat.

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