World

Indian rescue effort for 41 trapped in tunnel breaks through steel obstacle

20:51 pm on 23 November 2023

By Saurabh Sharma for Reuters

A member of the rescue team is near an entrance of the Silkyara road tunnel, during the final phase of the rescue operation, on 23 November, 2023. Photo: AFP

Rescuers in India are set to work through Thursday drilling through debris to reach 41 men trapped in a highway tunnel in the Himalayan region after removing a metal obstruction that slowed progress overnight, a top official said.

The men have been stuck in the 4.5km tunnel in Uttarakhand state for 11 days since it caved in early on 12 November and are safe, authorities have said, with access to light, oxygen, food, water and medicines.

Rescuers had expected to break through early on Thursday as only the last third of the debris blocking the tunnel remained to be drilled through before an evacuation pipe could be pushed in and the men pulled to safety.

But they encountered a lattice steel girder arch after covering 45 metres of the estimated 60m stretch of debris, which required about six hours to cut and remove, said the official, Bhaskar Khulbe.

"Our calculation as of now is ... roughly about 14 to 15 hours, unless something else happens, and we hope we will be able to do that," Khulbe, who works on the tunnel project, told reporters.

"It is difficult to anticipate what more hurdles we might face," he said, adding that since the structure was not one of very hard rock, no major problem was expected, apart from another metal obstacle or rock.

Once the drilling is completed, officials plan to send rescuers through the evacuation pipe with stretchers on wheels to bring out the trapped men, they said.

State Disaster Response Force personnel walk into the tunnel in the Uttarkashi district of India's Uttarakhand state. Photo: AFP

Authorities have not said what caused the tunnel collapse, but the region is prone to landslides, earthquakes and floods. Efforts to bring the men out have been slowed by snags in drilling in the mountainous terrain.

The collapsed tunnel is located on the Char Dham pilgrimage route, one of the most ambitious projects of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government.

It aims to link four important Hindu pilgrimage sites with 890km of two-lane road, being built at a cost of $US1.5 billion ($NZ2.4b).

On Wednesday the government said the National Highways Authority of India would do a safety audit of 29 tunnels it is building following the collapse.

- This story was first published by Reuters.