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Indian Navy operation to find trappped Meghalaya miners continues, one body recovered

By IANS | Updated: June 18, 2021 21:15 IST

New Delhi, June 18 Indian Navy divers have recovered one body after six days of operations to find ...

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New Delhi, June 18 Indian Navy divers have recovered one body after six days of operations to find five miners trapped in a flooded coal mine in Meghalaya's East Jaintia Hills district.

In one of the most physically and tactically daunting operations, a 12-member Indian Navy diving team was pressed into action since June 12 to search for the five miners trapped in the mine, which was inundated after a dynamite blast on May 30.

Sources said they has recovered body of one miner and efforts to search for the remaining four is still on.

The current operation entails the Navy divers to lower themselves and their specialised diving gear into an extremely narrow shaft to a depth of almost 400 feet and carry out diving upto further 100 feet, to search for the trapped miners within a complicated interconnecting labyrinth of horizontal shafts, with barely enough space for a person to crawl.

Diving operations are further challenged by poor underwater visibility, unmapped shaft construction hazards, flotsam and falling debris. Further, diving for prolonged durations in low temperatures (3-5 degree Celsius) pose significant medical risks such as hypothermia.

Also currently, over 50 personnel from the National Disaster Response Force, the State Disaster Response Force, the District Disaster Response Force, Fire and Emergency Service and the police have been deployed at the site, and the Naval divers trained to dive to such depths are carrying out the critical task of searching for and retrieving remains of the trapped miners.

Even with incessant rains, low visibility and numerous obstacles, the Navy divers assiduously continue with the search operation which has entered the sixth day, with the hope that any light at the end of the tunnel will bring lasting solace and closure to the families.

While the divers have specialised equipment such as the Diver Hand Held Navigation System (DHNS) for bottom-mapping of the mine-shaft, any technology can do little to ameliorate the raw, gut-wrenching adversity that such an operation entails.

In December 2018, Indian Navy had assisted in the rescue and recovery effort of 15 miners trapped in a mine in Ksan, Meghalaya under similar conditions.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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