Nearly 8,000 quintals of food material were taken to affected areas in the worst-hit Rudraprayag, Chamoli, Uttarkashi and Pithoragarh districts in choppers and on mules wherever possible but major roads are still blocked by debris falling over from the hills due to intermittent rains, official sources here said.
Rishikesh-Gangotri NH in Uttarkashi is blocked by debris in Netala whereas Rishikesh-Kedarnath NH is obstructed in Naulapani, Silli and Rampur.
Tilwada-Mayali-Guptkashi and Gopeshwar-Chopta roads in Rudraprayag district are also blocked for the last few days.
A roadmap for clearing tonnes of debris lying in Kedarghati and extricating bodies from under them was worked out at a meeting of GSI experts, Engineering Projects (India) Limited (EPIL) top brass and IAF officials with Chief Secretary Subhash Kumar and DGP Satyavrat Bansal here yesterday.
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A team of EPIL professionals and GSI experts will soon conduct an aerial recce of Kedarghati to explore how a base camp and a helipad could be built at the Himalayan shrine where MI-26 helicopters are to be flown to transport heavy equipment needed to clear the huge quantity of debris lying all over the temple premises, an exercise hampered so far due to lack of proper machines and bad weather.
As per the roadmap, the EPIL will scientifically carry out the exercise at the shrine which bore the brunt of the recent calamity in the hill state.
The task is mammoth considering the huge quantity of debris containing big boulders lying at Kedarnath, Gaurikund and Rambada but with scientific expertise provided by the GSI and ASI the operation is likely to be carried out successfully by EPIL personnel, Chief secretary Subhash Kumar said.
Heavy equipment like dozers, dumpers and rock breakers loaded in trucks have been dispatched from Delhi for the purpose, EPIL CMD SPS Bakshi who attended the meeting said.
The heavy mechanical equipment will be dismantled on their arrival here and transported in MI26 aircraft to Kedarnath where they will be reassembled before being put into service, he said.