The four communication nodes with direct satellite link set up by the ISRO team proved vital in ensuring round the clock communication between the officials of the state government and other agencies in the flood-affected areas as well as the outside world.
The first node was set up on the premises of Hari Niwas Guest House, which had become the make shift seat of the state government with Chief Minister Omar Abdullah, several of his ministers and top officials operating from there.
"Our team waded through waist deep water to install the communication node at the Civil Secretariat," Virender Kumar, group head of Satcom Systems and Technology Group (SSTG) at ISRO's Space Application Centre at Ahmadebad, told PTI.
Kumar and his team left Kashmir for home today, satisfied that the Valley has been connected to the country-wide Disaster Management Support (DMS) network.
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"At ISRO, we are working for last couple of years on setting up a nation-wide DMS network. We will be enhancing the capability of the network in the coming time.
Kumar was all praise for the state government employees who learned in the shortest possible time how to operate the communication nodes.
"ISRO will arrange for the annual maintenance contract for these nodes but it is now the responsibility of the state government to keep this equipment in good shape," Kumar said.
Asked why the DMS nodes were not installed earlier as Jammu and Kashmir is in a disaster-prone zone, he said ISRO was ready to install these nodes across the country but it is the state government which has to come foward with its requirements.