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The government of Sikkim declared the flood a disaster, and the Indian central government released ₹48 crore ($5.76 million) in disaster relief funds. [a] [10] [13] Additionally, the state government announced an ex-gratia compensation of ₹4 lakh ($4804) to the families of those who died, as well as an immediate payment of ₹2,000 ($24) to those in relief camps. [14]
On 14 July 2018, 10 Indian Army soldiers were killed as result of Avalanche in Siachen. [101] On 19 January 2019, 7 Indian Army soldiers were killed as result of an avalanche in Siachen. [102] On 3 June 2019, Indian defense minister Rajnath Singh visited the Indian army's forward posts and base camp in Siachen. He interacted with the Indian ...
Lance Naik Hanumanthappa Koppad, a 32-year-old Indian soldier with the 19th battalion of the Madras Regiment of the Indian Army, survived the massive avalanche and was found on 8 February during post-disaster avalanche rescue operations by the Indian Army, six days after the disaster. He was rescued from 35 feet beneath the snow in −45 °C ...
An avalanche interrupted work, so a secondary tunnel was then drilled for safety reasons as the waters rose to 10 metres below. [19] Dangerous sloughing of ice delayed the work until finally a 198-metre-long hole was completed on 4 June, [ 19 ] days before lake began to escape via the manmade waterfall on 13 June.
From 2 to 5 October 1968, there were four days of continuous rainfall in the region of Sikkim and Darjeeling. At its peak, during a 52-hours period, there was 1,000mm of rainfall. The rain caused hundreds of landslides. Houses and bridges were destroyed, including the known Anderson Bridge at the Teesta Bazaar. [1]
Authorities in Idaho on Friday located and retrieved the body of a man who was caught in an avalanche while backcountry skiing with two other men who were rescued the previous day. The two men ...
It takes years to train a proper avalanche dog, and actually finding people under the snow (as shown in this video) is only a small part of the training they must undergo.
At the time of the ice avalanche, the base was occupied by soldiers of the 6th Northern Light Infantry battalion, [13] a unit "trained in mountain operations". [10] Avalanches are uncommon in the area of Gayari; due to the low avalanche risk, Gayari was a bigger complex and housed many more soldiers than other bases in the Siachen region. [10]