26 Nov 2023

Uttarakhand tunnel collapse: Rescuers to dig by hand to rescue trapped workers

10:39 am on 26 November 2023
A rescue personnel stands near an entrance of the Silkyara under construction road tunnel, during the final phase of a rescue operation, days after a portion of it collapsed in the Uttarkashi district of India's Uttarakhand state on November 23, 2023. Ambulances were on standby on November 23 morning, as Indian rescuers dug through the final metres of debris separating them from 41 workers trapped in a collapsed road tunnel for nearly two weeks. (Photo by Arun SANKAR / AFP)

The workers have been trapped in the tunnel for two weeks, after a section of it caved in. Photo: AFP

Rescue work to save 41 workers trapped in a tunnel in India's Uttarakhand state has been delayed by at least four to five days because the drilling machine broke down inside the tunnel.

Rescuers will begin digging manually once the faulty part is removed.

The workers have been stuck inside the tunnel for two weeks after a portion of it collapsed due to a landslide.

The operation has been challenging due to the presence of rocks, stones and metal inside the debris.

Rescuers have to resort to drilling by hand because the auger keeps getting stuck on pieces of metal that have been mixed in with the debris, and say it would be better to switch to manual drilling instead of waiting for a replacement machine.

Arnold Dix, a tunnelling expert helping with the rescue work, told reporters at the site: "The machine has broken. It's irreparable. It is disrupted."

But Dix said he was confident the 41 men would return home, saying there were "many ways" to reach them.

This picture released by Department of Information and Public Relation (DIPR) Uttarakhand and taken with endoscopic camera on November 21, 2023 shows a group of workers trapped inside the under-construction tunnel, days after it collapsed in the Uttarkashi district of India's Uttarakhand state. Forty-one Indian workers trapped in a collapsed road tunnel for 10 days were seen alive on camera for the first time November 21 as workers attempted to create new passageways to free them.

A picture taken with an endoscopic camera shows the workers trapped in the under-construction tunnel. Photo: AFP / Department of Information and Public Relation (DIPR) Uttarakhand

A section of the 4.5km Silkyara tunnel in the Indian Himalayas caved in on 12 November.

Contact was established with the trapped men shortly thereafter, and they have been receiving oxygen, food, and water ever since.

Rescuers were just 9m from breaking through to the workers before the auger broke.

Pushkar Singh Dhami, chief minister of Uttarakhand state, told reporters on Saturday (local time) that the damaged drilling machine would be taken out by Sunday morning allowing rescuers to continue digging manually.

Dhami told reporters he had spoken to the trapped men, saying: "They are in good spirits. They said: 'Take as many days as you require, don't worry about us.'"

In the meantime, ambulances have been kept on standby outside the tunnel. Officials say the aim is to pull the workers out to safety and shift them to the nearby hospital as quickly as possible.

- This story was originally published by the BBC

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