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Avalanches kill six in Indian Kashmir
by Staff Writers
Srinagar, India (AFP) March 12, 2014


Avalanche kills four Pakistani soldiers: military
Islamabad (AFP) March 12, 2014 - At least four soldiers were killed when an avalanche struck a base camp in northern Pakistan, the military said on Wednesday.

The incident happened in the snow-covered Astore area which falls in the territory of Gilgit-Baltistan, also claimed by India as part of the disputed Kashmir region.

"At least 26 soldiers came under a huge snow slide Tuesday night near Astore. Despite extreme weather hazard, 22 soldiers were evacuated through heroic efforts while four soldiers embraced Shahadat (martyrdom)," the military said in a statement.

Snow slides in Astore and surrounding areas are common.

At least 140 soldiers were buried two years ago by an avalanche at the high-altitude Gayari base.

The base sits just below the Siachen Glacier, known as the "world's highest battlefield", where Pakistani and Indian troops have faced off in extreme conditions since the 1980s.

The incident sparked a bout of national mourning with military rescuers digging in tunnels in the hard mass of the snow and ice that hit the battalion headquarters of the 6th Northern Light Infantry to try to recover the bodies.

Several foreign specialist teams from Norway, United States, Germany and Switzerland had also participated in rescue and recovery operations, which lasted well over one year.

Avalanches triggered by unusually heavy snowfall killed at least six people in Indian Kashmir, as flimsy buildings caved in across the Himalayan valley, police said Wednesday.

The dead included two soldiers who were crushed by snow in Kargil, a mountainous area of the remote Ladakh region, while four others were killed by avalanches in the south of the state, according to Superintendent Imtiyaz Hussain.

After the bodies were recovered Wednesday, Hussain said three Nepalese labourers may also have died in the remote area of Kaksar, but police have not been able to reach the site as the terrain is difficult and the risk of further avalanches too high.

Police and army teams have begun rescuing people from other avalanche-prone areas and an unknown number of people have been hospitalised.

"We have rescued 50 people so far. Many areas have become inaccessible and communication lines are down," Hussain told AFP Wednesday.

The state government's disaster management authority had on Tuesday warned people across the mountainous periphery of the Kashmir valley to avoid moving along steep slopes.

Power supply in most of the Kashmir valley has also been cut off since Tuesday and mobile phone services have been severely affected after accumulated snow brought down transmission lines.

Avalanches in Kashmir during winter are not uncommon but heavy snowfall in the middle of March is rare, residents say.

Thirteen soldiers died in 2012 when an avalanche hit their base in Gurez near the de facto border that divides Kashmir between India and Pakistan.

In February 2010 blizzards and avalanches killed 17 soldiers near the famous ski resort of Gulmarg where the Indian army's elite high altitude warfare school is also located.

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