Pakistan says little hope for buried troops

Army says finding survivors would be “miracle” although search continues for 139 soldiers buried by Kashmir avalanche.

Paskitan avalanche
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Head of Pakistan’s military operations said the rescue  efforts are continuing despite dwindling hopes [AP]

A Pakistan commander says there is no sign of life as search continues for the 139 people buried when a massive avalanche hit a military complex close to the Indian border more than a week ago.

“We are praying to God for a miracle,” Major General Ishfaq Nadeem Ahmad, the head of military operations, said at a press conference on Saturday in the garrison town of Rawalpindi.

Bad weather has hampered efforts to try to find survivors of the avalanche that trapped its victims beneath 25m of snow in one of the most unforgiving environments in the world.

The disaster struck early on Saturday a week ago at an altitude of 4,000m near the Siachen Glacier in the Karakoram mountain range.

Ahmad said the sheer size of the avalanche, which covered an area about 1km wide, and the increasingly bad weather conditions were the biggest hurdles to the rescue effort.

He said the military had used the camp for more than 20 years, had never before faced a disaster of such magnitude and would not yet abandon the search.

Effort continues

“We are continuing with both rescue and recovery. We are hoping to continue the rescue efforts until such a time that we get to the people over there,” he said.

Pakistan has accepted international help from countries including the United States and China.

Nine international experts from Germany and Switzerland are at the rescue site but the US team has not been able to make it due to bad weather.

Muslim-majority Kashmir is at the heart of hostility between India and Pakistan and was the cause of two of their three full-scale wars since independence from Britain in 1947.

Between 10,000 and 20,000 Indian and Pakistani troops are stationed in the mountains above the glacier.

Source: News Agencies