Agencies/Kolkata

Heavy rains were hampering a search for residents feared buried under piles of debris as the death toll from landslides in the tea-growing region of Darjeeling reached 38, police said yesterday.
The rains have triggered fresh landslides in the Mirik area where rescue teams were struggling to find those buried in the mud and debris that barrelled down slopes on Tuesday night into their homes.
Darjeeling district magistrate Anurag Srivastava said rescue workers were using their bare hands and basic tools to clear debris, with blocked roads stopping heavy equipment from reaching the site.
“Fresh landslides washed away a road near Mirik making it impossible to transport heavy equipment to remove boulders and debris,” Srivastava, who is overseeing the rescue operation in Mirik, said.
“The rescue teams are using their hands to search for people and clear the debris, but further rain is making it difficult.”
The original landslides also struck homes built on slopes in Kalimpong and Darjeeling in West Bengal, leaving a trail of destruction in the scenic region.
“The victims were killed in their sleep. No one got the opportunity to escape,” Srivastava said.
Darjeeling district police superintendent Amit P Javalgi said the death toll had reached 38 after the discovery of more bodies with “at least 11 people still missing”.
Some 2,000 people have been evacuated from the sites of landslides which have also cut bridges and triggered power cuts.
“Rescuers are using heavy lifting equipment for the first time to clear roads leading to the site of the disaster,” Javalgi said.
The Indian Army has deployed two medical and engineers task forces.
West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee and federal Minister of State for Home Affairs Kiren Rijiju were in the region to take stock of the situation.
Meanwhile, an expert said ill-planned roads and neglect of indigenous erosion-control measures in hilly areas like in Darjeeling cause landslides in India.
“Widening and constructing roads in the plains is easy but in the hills it is a challenge. In the hills, there is a need for supporting and stabilising systems to protect the exposed surface of the hills due to construction,” Chandan Ghosh, professor and head, Geo Hazards division, National Institute of Disaster Management (NIDM), said
“The harsh truth is there is a lot of haphazard construction going on without following proper guidelines and without any supporting steps post-construction,” Ghosh said.



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