Mine mishap: Rescue operations to resume with use of sophisticated equipment

Press Trust of India  |  Khliehriat (Meghalaya) 

The multi-agency operation to rescue the 15 miners trapped in a 370-foot-deep rat-hole coal mine is all set to resume Sunday, officials said.

The IAF helicopter transporting sophisticated diving equipment of the landed at a football ground here. The machines are to be shortly transported to the accident site, 37 km from here, of Police (SP) told

The (NDRF) is coordinating the rescue operations with the help of Navy, the NDMA and Coal India Ltd, he said.

The divers are likely to go inside the vertical shaft of the rat-hole coal mine Sunday, the SP said.

"The divers have reported that they have the capacity to go a depth of 100 feet, whereas the NDRF divers can go to a depth of 30 feet," he said.

A 14-member Navy team led by R Khetwal and a 21-member contingent have been visiting the site since Saturday, Asst Commandant Santosh Kumar Singh said.

Singh briefed them about the conditions of the area and a gave them a sketch of the mine and the nearby shafts.

A said few pumps of has arrived in Guwahati and are expected to reach the site soon.

Meanwhile, a group of divers arrived from Vishakhapatnam Saturday to join operations underway to rescue 15 miners trapped in a flooded rat-hole coal mine in since December 13.

The 15-member team, equipped with specialised diving equipment, including a re-compression chamber and remotely operated vehicles capable of searching underwater, went straightway to the in the remote Lumthari village in East district.

They were briefed in detail by the NDRF personnel supervising the entire rescue operations since their arrival on December 14, a senior official of the East district said.

A team of rescuers with 10 high-powered Kirloskar pumps has also reached the spot from Bhubaneshwar, District of Police told on Saturday.

Another 8 high powered pumps mobilised by are being taken by road and expected to arrive in another 2 to 3 days, North Eastern Coalfields said Saturday.

company and Coal India were jointly moving 18 high-powered pumps to drain water out of the 370-foot-deep mine.

The rat-hole mine located on top of a hillock fully covered with trees had got flooded when water from the nearby Lytein river gushed into it on December 13, trapping the 15 diggers.

Pumping of water from the mine was suspended on Saturday last as there was no visible receding of the water level in it.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, December 30 2018. 13:40 IST