Chief minister Mamata Banerjee today said as many as 108 people from
Bengal were untraced in Nepal and her government was trying its best to
gather details about their whereabouts.
"The government is trying to collect information about the 108 people
by checking with their families and even visiting their homes. We have
gathered few numbers and the process of rechecking their status would
continue," Mamata said at Uttarkanya, the administrative headquarters of
north Bengal in Siliguri before telling Raj Kanojia, DG (coastal
security), to run a check on the status of those missing.
"A 24x7 helpline is being opened at Uttarkanya. As far as those who
are still stranded, the government would send a bus to Kathmandu to
bring them back. A senior officer would be going with the bus to oversee
the entire process."
The bus will leave Siliguri tomorrow.
The chief minister was speaking soon after meeting top officials of
the north Bengal development department and senior officials from the
two districts of Darjeeling and Jalpaiguri for working on ways to combat
natural disasters in this quake-prone zone of Bengal that has witnessed
eight deaths till date.
"We had information that 336 people, including tourists from Bengal,
were stranded. Some of them have already returned and others have
reached New Delhi," chief minister said. "Bengal's resident commissioner
in New Delhi is making all arrangements to send them back by Rajdhani
Express."
Contact has been established with these tourists.
Of the 108 untraced people, many are workers, some tourists and some
wedding guests, said a senior official of the disaster management
department.
Officials of the department, who provided the figure of the missing
persons to Mamata, said they had collated the figures from the control
rooms they had set up in different parts of the state.
"The control rooms have been receiving calls from the worried
relatives of those who are missing in Nepal and want the state
government to help in tracing them out," an officer of the disaster
management department said. "They have collected the information on the
missing from these calls and compiled a list. It is this list that we
have provided to the chief minister."
With Kathmandu's death toll steadily rising, senior officials present
at today's meeting couldn't hide their concern on the number of people
that remain untraced from Bengal.
"The missing figure is based on the information reaching us as of
now. It could well be more, though we hope that it's not so," said a
senior official from the Darjeeling district.
Senior officials said according to primary estimate, over 3,000
people from 62 blocks in 61 villages have been affected by the
earthquake across the state and the process of assessment was still on.
"Several government buildings, including schools, colleges and even
hospitals have suffered damage. Many bridges too have been hit," Mamata
said.
"All the departments concerned, including health, PWD, panchayat and
irrigation, have been asked to make a detailed assessment of the damage.
It's a time-taking process. Once that is done, we will seek central
assistance for carrying out the repairs."
PWD officials who were present at the meeting admitted in private
that there had been no intensive risk assessment of bridges and flyovers
in north Bengal since the Bijonbari bridge collapse in October 2011
that left 41 dead.
"The assessment includes estimation of the effects of multiple common
hazards like abnormal traffic loads, environmental attacks and
earthquakes. Such studies have not really happened," said an engineer.
Chief minister today proposed setting up of a "Seba-Sree", a
10-member team for helping the disaster management teams, in each of the
districts to expedite the process of reaching out to the victims of
natural calamities. "The idea is to provide a human face to the
government as early as possible," Mamata said.(TT)
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