India floods: Mass cremations to begin for Kedarnath victims
India, 25 June 2013: Rescuers are making a push to reach thousands still stranded
by flooding and landslides in northern India, as officials prepare to hold mass funerals
for those killed. Air force helicopters are flying to the temple town of Badrinath
to bring down the 6,000 pilgrims still stuck there.
Meanwhile police say firewood,
fuel and priests have been flown to the town of Kedarnath to perform mass cremations.
The floods have killed more than 600 people in Uttarakhand state. State Chief Minister
Vijay Bahuguna said at the weekend that he feared at least 1,000 people had died.
Officials say 97,000 people have been rescued so far. Early monsoon rains in India
this year are believed to be the heaviest in 80 years.
On Tuesday morning,
rescue operations were delayed due to rain, but once the weather improved air force
helicopters began preparing for sorties to Badrinath - the last of the areas where
thousands of pilgrims are still stranded in the mountains. Air force officials say
they need to get to the affected areas urgently as time is running out for survivors.
Meanwhile
a senior police official in the state capital, Dehradun, told the BBC that mass funerals
were due to take place in the Hindu temple town of Kedarnath, worst hit by the floods.
Police says lots of bodies are piled up around the temple and many of them have begun
decomposing, the BBC's Sanjoy Majumder reports from Dehradun.
Many of them
remain unidentified so they are being photographed and DNA samples are being taken
and preserved for the families of those still missing, our correspondent adds. The
cremations are expected to carry on until Saturday, police say.Source: BBC