Manipur landslide: 8 people killed, nearly 70 missing

Updated : Jul 02, 2022 21:33
|
PTI

The Army on Thursday said 13 soldiers of the Territorial Army and five civilians have so far been rescued from the landslide-hit railway construction site in Manipur's Noney district.

At least eight people were killed and over 70 went missing after a massive landslide hit the railway construction site on Wednesday night.

In a statement, the Army said Assam Rifles and Territorial Army troops carried out the rescue operations throughout the day in the general area of the Tupul railway station, in spite of inclement weather.

"The civil administration has cautioned civilians living in downstream areas of the (Ejai) river to take precautions and evacuate due to likelihood of breach in the dam created on the river by the landslide," the statement said.

The search operations will continue during the night, it added.

Engineering equipment, including dozers, have been pressed into service for creating access to the site and help in the rescue efforts, it said.

"Teams of Indian Railways, civil administration, NDRF (National Disaster Response Force), SDRF (State Disaster Response Force) and locals of Noney district are also actively contributing in the search," the statement noted.

"So far, 13 soldiers of Territorial Army and five civilians have been rescued, while mortal remains of seven soldiers and one civilian have been recovered," it said. 

Also Watch| Assam floods: Orange alert issued for Monday, death toll reaches 71

LandslideManipur

Recommended For You

editorji | India

'Operation Tiger is complete,' roars Shinde as 6 Uddhav MPs join his Sena; calls them Dhurandhar

editorji | India

Kashmiri Pandits should move on, stop being prisoners of past: Mehbooba

editorji | India

At least 15 dead as fire rips through Lucknow building, students among victims

editorji | India

SC seeks responses of Centre, States on plea for use of Aadhaar as identity proof only

editorji | India

Abhijeet Dipke slapped during Jaipur protest; 'intimidation tactics', alleges CJP founder