Accompanied by chief secretary Subhash Kumar and officials of Engineers (India) Projects Limited, ASI and GSI, Bahuguna arrived at the shrine this morning to explore methods to build a helipad there to accommodate MI26 choppers commissioned to transport heavy equipment like bulldozers, JCBs and powerful stone cutting tools to Kedar valley to launch the operations, official sources here said.
The task is mammoth as a huge quantity of debris with a strong possibility of decomposing bodies lying under them has to be removed from the premises and over 40 badly damaged structures nearby have to be razed to the ground, officials here said.
ASI and GSI experts have also been roped in to provide technical advice to the EIPL team in the rubble clearing operations to prevent further damage, they said.
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The authorities have only one and half months' time left to complete the exercise as the possibility of snowfall beginning in the area from the month of September may halt the operations midway through.
In circumstances like these, removal of debris from the shrine premises, razing of dilapidated structures nearby to the ground and putting all arrangements in place for regular prayers to start at the famed shrine poses the biggest challenge before the government.