Saturday, May 10, 2008
   
 
 
yournews
   
Video Finance Features Weather Travel Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
Asia Pacific News

 
 

Forty-one killed as heavy snowfall brings Indian Kashmir to a halt
Posted: 21 February 2005 0313 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 


SRINAGAR, India : At least 41 people have been killed in Indian Kashmir after the heaviest snowfall in two decades brought life in the region to a near-halt, officials and witnesses said.

Sixteen bodies were recovered from two villages hit by an avalanche near a mountain tunnel about 100 kilometres (62 miles) south of Srinagar, Kashmir's summer capital, an army spokesman said.

About 40 people were missing from the villages and army teams with sniffer dogs were searching for survivors, Lieutenant Colonel V.K. Batra said.

Earlier in the day, 11 bodies were recovered after an avalanche hit Loren village in southern Poonch district, police said, while 12 deaths were reported overnight from similar snow-related accidents in Doda, Udhampur, Srinagar and Budgam district.

Two people were killed in a house collapse in Dras district.

This takes the death toll in two weeks of heavy snow to 69, including 19 soldiers.

More bodies were believed to be trapped in the snow at Loren, police said, adding that army rescue teams had reached the scene.

Army personnel earlier rescued some 35 civilians when an avalanche hit them in Kishtwar district, police said.

"It's a state of emergency and the government is doing its best to cope with the situation," state minister Peer Zaada Mohammed Sayeed said.

Srinagar has been without power for three days. Officials said it would take at least three days to restore even minimum power in the city, often plagued by blackouts.

"It's the heaviest snowfall in two decades," G.K. Mohanti, head of the state meteorological department, told AFP.

Normal life in Srinagar came to a halt after several feet of snow blanketed the city, with shops and markets closed and people not venturing out.

Road links were cut, causing a shortage of essential supplies. Continuous snow in the region since late Thursday also halted air travel.

A police officer said more than 1,500 people were stranded along a snowbound highway between Srinagar and the winter capital Jammu and motorists were being housed in emergency accommodation.

Indian troops posted to the region to fight Islamic rebels have been ordered to help in relief operations, said Lieutenant General Hari Prasad, who heads the army's northern command.

"We have set up three medical camps on the (Jammu-Srinagar) highway where doctors will provide free checkups and medicines to those down with weather-related problems," Prasad said.

"Soldiers posted in the upper reaches and far-flung areas of Kashmir have been directed to restore road traffic and communication systems that stand totally paralysed," Prasad added.

The bleak weather conditions failed to disrupt an international ski competition at Gulmarg, 50 kilometres (30 miles) west of Srinagar, Sunday.

Organisers, who were mulling cancellation of the two-day event, decided to continue when a team from Norway managed to reach the venue.

- AFP

 

 



Other asiapacific News
UN launches Myanmar aid appeal and tells junta to open up
World Food Programme to resume aid flights to Myanmar
Myanmar says it will accept US cyclone aid
Myanmar says 'not ready' for foreign aid workers
SKorea, US to discuss NKorea's food aid amid reports of deaths
Eleven killed in Sri Lanka bomb blast ahead of key local polls
Japan lawmakers vote to allow military use of space
Hu Jintao in warm talks with Japan's imperial couple
Myanmarese cross over to Thailand for food and healthcare services
Perak's new govt seeks increased investment amid new political landscape
UN halts Myanmar aid over 'unacceptable' restrictions
UN warns another storm headed towards Myanmar
Chinese president's Japan visit seen paving way for better ties
Beijing tightens security as Games approach
US Marine gets two-year prison term in Japan sex case
Death toll in China HFMD outbreak hits 34
US warns China of "technological isolation"
Aung San Suu Kyi party urges Myanmar junta to delay vote
More quakes hit Tokyo, eastern Japan

 


Advertisements

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions