Uttarakhand tragedy: Patience of kin running thin

June 22, 2013 06:48 pm | Updated June 07, 2016 08:24 am IST - Dehradun

Stranded pilgrims walk to safer places after they were evacuated by army soldiers in Govindghat on Saturday.

Stranded pilgrims walk to safer places after they were evacuated by army soldiers in Govindghat on Saturday.

Carrying photographs, people here are running from one hospital to other in desperation to get some news about their relatives and friends as their patience ran thin due to passage of almost a week since the tragedy struck in Uttarakhand.

Family members and friends of those, who are stranded or missing in the hill state, have come here and are desperately searching hospitals and camps to get some news about their loved ones.

They are also condemning “total absence” of sensitivity on part of the administration.

“I have come from Delhi in search of my parents and one of our relatives. I last spoke to them on June 15, since then I have no news about them,” said a man whose family had come for Kedarnath pilgrimage.

Another man alleged apathy on part of the government officials and said that “priority is being given to foreigners while Indians are left behind to die”.

“My children have been stranded there for the last eight days without food and water. They are borrowing phones to call us, but we are helpless. Authorities are doing nothing, foreigners are being given priority in rescue and relief work while Indians are being left behind to die of hunger,” he said.

“No Uttarakhand officials or any public representatives have reached here. No credible information has been given to us by anyone or from anywhere,” he added.

Another youth whose relatives are stranded in Gourikund said that his relatives told him that around 2,500 people are stuck there with them.

“I can’t understand why despite unprecedented devastation, the tragedy has not been declared a national calamity so far. 2,500 people are stranded in Gourikund with my relatives and it’s impossible to evacuate them at the current rate as one chopper is bringing just 10-15 people at a time. Government should press in more helicopters immediately,” he said.

Sharan, who along with his family was rescued from Badrinath and brought to Chamouli relief camp on Friday, said, “The situation is pathetic. Had the army not been there we had no chance of coming back ever. I reached there on 15th and that’s the time the rain started pouring in.”

“Till 18, by the time army stepped in, we had no information. We were told that roads will be cleared in two days but the army came and told us that roads cannot be cleared for 30 days at least. That came as a shocker to me,” he said.

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