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Avalanche traps about 150 Pakistani soldiers

A letter from Siachen


DAWN.COM | 2 days ago



“We, the willing, are doing the impossible for the ungrateful. We have done so much, with so little, for so long, we are now qualified to do anything, with nothing.”

This quotation was written diagonally on the first page of his diary as he showed me his poems. My host is a young man, whose spirits are still volatile despite the sub-zero temperature of this place. It is our first meeting. He does not know that the quotation is by mother Teresa, he does not know mother Teresa at all. He thinks it was said for him, dismissing any reason for researching its origins. The young man got engaged recently, the reason for an occasional blush whenever the subject of his future comes up. I only reached here the night before, but we are close friends now. There is something in the wind, with flakes, that urge people to speak in never-ending monologues. Discuss emotions, exchange secrets, talk about themselves – things they do not talk about ‘normally,’ not the least when they are engrossed in the workings of the ‘civilised world.’ I asked him about the quotation on the wall and he said let’s call it a day.

My room, call it my studio apartment, is a typical bunker, built on self-help basis, thanks to our meagre resources. Carved out from a hillock, it is a classical one-window room of 14×10 feet. The 10-foot high ceiling had 70 girders. Trivial information, you say? I count them every night before I can sleep. No, I have not grown insomniac, but I dare not venture out to count stars in this part of the world.

On one side, the empty cartons have been arranged, covered by gunny bags, only to be topped by the prayer mat. I have a lot of time to pray and reflect, probably since I am the closest I could get to Him. The other wall supports the bed (an arrangement of empty cartons) upon which lies an air mattress, along with our sleeping bags. Tastefully, the big-flower-print bed sheet does not permit the attention to drift to the poor structure of the bed. The dark toilet is an extension of the same room. An old cough syrup bottle has been modified with kerosene oil to serve the purpose of the lamp which practically lights up nothing. The empty ghee cans are our makeshift geysers. Basic instinct is the best aide when it comes to anatomy in the dark bathroom. The room décor is an artistic arrangement of the empty containers of food, fuel and fire. Food cartons serve as tables, fuel cans as stools and empty (fired) cartridges as bedside teapoy items. The most decorated table has boxes of chicken cubes, noodles, egg biscuits, brick-game and yes, our window to the world, the radio. Other inhabitants include a Fujika (a kerosene-lit heater), petromax, the books that you have sent and the military phone – this masterpiece of technology which connects me to you, remains silent. The weather, the snow, the wind, the electric power everything conspires against our probable communication. Reminds me how Shah Latif narrates the plight of Sassi after she had been robbed of Pannu:

“The camel (which carries Pannu) is my enemy, the wind (which is erasing the foot prints of caravan) is my enemy, the sand is my enemy and so are the brothers of Pannu,

And most of all the sun is my enemy, for having risen so late and not waking me up”

Our high point of the day arrives when we sit down for dinner. Fresh vegetables are a luxury. We have to live on roasted onions and tomato puree, which is canned. The weather denies us the luxury of fresh vegetables, and much more. After getting over with dinner, we gather around the radio and switch it on. This really is the world on our finger tips. There is no FM here, only the BBC and loads of incomprehensible regional channels. The alternative to BBC is Radio Pakistan, which runs the night-time transmission. About the night-time transmission, it is the radio’s revenge from the television for morning shows.

Another day has gone. The vigilant sentries change over their duties. Far from home, away from gatherings, phone calls, SMS-es, these men, I think, are doing something which can never be monetised. Purposelessly, looking against the ravishing snowstorms, their biggest foe is the weather. You can never predict its move. It sulks within and you only realise how loosely you hang between a life and death when it hits you. A minor headache turns into cerebral edema and a man full of stories, intentions, commitments and emotions becomes, what they call, a ‘causality.’

The radio is tuned up and we start receiving our dose of military bashing. A whole lot of qualified individuals start describing us as a merry-making mob, with no clue about how one can party at 20,000 ft above the mean sea level. My mind races. Huge chunks of budget for tomato puree and canned vegetables. Power hungry for morally supporting everyone that we have, people who love us and people who are the reason we live to guard this piece of land. Luxurious lives in a make-shift room with empty cartons. I think the quotation on the wall is not so over-rated.

Hope to hear from you soon…

Yours faithfully,
H

The author, who wishes to remain anonymous, served his tenure at Siachen with the men who were trapped under an avalanche on Saturday. This letter is one of the several that he wrote to his wife during his time at the glacier.
 
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I dont understand how this avalanche was so bad. It happens in many different countries but never i've heard a loss that bad. Is it true that you can't scream, or make any other bang noises ? Was this a particular cause in Siachin or was it just natural?
 
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I dont understand how this avalanche was so bad. It happens in many different countries but never i've heard a loss that worse. Is it true that you can't scream, or make any other bang noises ? Was this a particular part of the cause or was it just natural?

there is a rumbling, a roar and before you know it, it overwhelms you. and this was not a normal avalanche. it looks like half the mountain-side came roaring down the plain.
 
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there is a rumbling, a roar and before you know it, it overwhelms you. and this was not a normal avalanche. it looks like half the mountain-side came roaring down the plain.

Hi Fatman, can you post the latest pics of the rescue effort to show us all the ground situation?
 
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I would imagine that in -70 degrees and in harsh stormy conditions, you'll have to search and rescue survivors sort of like this:

 
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Hi Fatman, can you post the latest pics of the rescue effort to show us all the ground situation?

sir when it comes to posting/uploading i'm a nerd (if u know what i mean) - i failed IT-101
 
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there is a rumbling, a roar and before you know it, it overwhelms you. and this was not a normal avalanche. it looks like half the mountain-side came roaring down the plain.
Sir Fat, i wish i could explain the location with the help of GE. i exactly know the place and can explain how the avalanche had to travel almost over 1000 meters and then cross a small river and then bury 150 men alive! But then the GE snap might not be taken well by my bosses.

Still i will try to relate it with the pictures released by ISPR.
 
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For me, they aren't dead until they are in their graves. For now, we will treat every man as a survivor. "This will be a rescue mission until the last man has been found"- Gen. Athar Abbas

I have been holding off comment hoping that, by some miracle, some lives may have been spared. Regardless, they are all heroes, the ones who gave their life, and the ones who endure those conditions day in and day out.
 
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Here are some rescue workers:

Avalanche-buries-124-Pak-troops-in-Siachen-300x199.jpg
 
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Sir Fat, i wish i could explain the location with the help of GE. i exactly know the place and can explain how the avalanche had to travel almost over 1000 meters and then cross a small river and then bury 150 men alive! But then the GE snap might not be taken well by my bosses.

Still i will try to relate it with the pictures released by ISPR.

So great to hear from you, rumor had it that you're one of the people trapped in there.
 
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Hopes fade for 135 feared dead in Pakistan avalanche


Report—Agence France-Presse 04/08/2012


by Sami Zubeiri

ISLAMABAD, April 8, 2012 (AFP) - The Pakistani military on Sunday dug through snow, boulders and slush in an increasingly desperate search for 135 people buried in an avalanche, as hopes faded of finding any survivors.

Nearly 36 hours after a wall of snow crashed into a remote army camp high up in the mountains of Kashmir, rescuers were yet to recover any survivors or even bodies from the Siachen Glacier, where Pakistani and Indian troops face off.

The camp was engulfed between 5:00am and 6:00am on Saturday -- perhaps when some were sleeping -- by a mass of snow, stones, mud and slush more than 1,000 metres (3,300 feet) wide and 25 metres high, the military said in a statement.

About 180 military personnel and 60 civilian rescuers were braving freezing temperatures at the inhospitable site close to the de facto border with India, in area known as the world's highest battlefield, the military said.

Experts familiar with the glacier said there was little hope of finding survivors -- the military said overnight that 135 people were missing from the camp, including 124 soldiers from the 6th Northern Light Infantry battalion.

"There is no hope, there is no chance at all," mountaineering expert Colonel Sher Khan told AFP.

"You can survive only in the first 5-10 minutes," said Khan. "The casualties in avalanches occur due to pressure of heavy weight, extreme cold and lack of oxygen."

The powerful army chief General Ashfaq Kayani visited the epicentre of the disaster and "supervised rescue operations himself", the military said.

"The avalanche of such a magnitude was unprecedented in last 20 years of this Battalion Headquarters existence at Gayari," he said.

General Kayani instructed the commanders "to optimally utilize all available resources at their disposal and leave no stone unturned to reach out to the entrapped personnel," it said.

"It's a huge, huge avalanche," a senior military officer told AFP, adding rescue work would take several days.

Specially trained search-and-rescue teams of army engineers equipped with the latest locating gadgets and heavy machinery had arrived, the military statement said, joining rescue units aided by sniffer dogs and helicopters.

"Adequate medical staff has been made available for the treatment of injured persons in forward field hospitals," it added.

A tailor and two hairdressers were among the civilians missing in the thick snow in the militarised region of Kashmir, which has caused two of the three wars between India and Pakistan since their independence in 1947 from Britain.

The United States Sunday expressed its "deep concern" for the soldiers trapped in the avalanche and offered assistance in the search operations, the US embassy said.

"We offer our condolences for those who have lost their lives as a result of the avalanche," it said.

"The United States is ready to assist Pakistan in search, rescue and recovery operations."

Siachen became a flashpoint when India occupied key areas in 1984, including the heights, prompting Pakistan to immediately respond by deploying its own forces.

The nuclear-armed rivals fought a fierce battle over Siachen in 1987, raising fears of all-out conflict, although the guns on the glacier have largely fallen silent since a slow-moving peace process was launched in 2004.

India and Pakistan have spent heavily to keep a military presence on the glacier, where temperatures can plunge to minus 70 degrees Celsius (minus 95F).

New Delhi reportedly spends more than 40 million rupees ($800,000) daily on its Siachen deployment -- a figure that does not include additional wages and bonuses.

Experts have previously said that India has around 5,000 troops on the glacier, while Pakistan has less than half that number. The harsh weather and altitude claim many more lives than actual fighting.

Avalanches and landslides frequently block roads and leave communities isolated in the mountains of Pakistan, neighbouring Afghanistan and in Kashmir.

In February, at least 16 Indian soldiers on duty in the mountains of Kashmir were killed when two avalanches swept through army camps.

© 1994-2012 Agence France-Presse
 
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chances are bleak but i am still hoping against hope and let me tell you they r heroes who died protecting their country standing on that place itself is alot they r heroes and will be remembered as such
 
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Ok, i will try to explain the situation:-

This is the pic released by ISPR, try to relate it with the one i have taken from GE:-


Image from GE (late 2011):-


Another view of the area:-


Ground level view:-


So as you guys can see that the BHQ was well located both to cover the enemy approach (the 'La' Balti word for Way/Route - from where the avalanche was initiated) and to avoid contact in case an avalanche occurred (atleast 1 KM away from it over a PLAIN area where avalanches cannot normally travel and that too shielded by a River!).

This was totally unexpected as avalanches normally happen over a mountain i.e. the snow that has been piling over it slips and moves, but in this case the entire bl00dy GLACIER has moved as shown in pic #2 (see the area above the point where i have pointed out the location of ice in late 2011 - this ice is not exactly ice rather a mountain of ice which have been formed over hundreds over years and which moves an inch over 10 years!). Damn it! Glaciers dont move in this part of the world! There is no Arctic Ocean touching the feet of the glacier and melting it!!

And then surprisingly there was no earthquake that could have shifted it either. It's like, one fine morning a mountain gets up and sits on you without any reason!
 
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