4000 residents shifted from sinking Joshimath

Over 600 buildings in "sinking Joshimath" have developed cracks, officials said. The ones that are most damaged will be demolished.

NewsBharati    10-Jan-2023 13:29:49 PM
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Joshimath, Jan 10: Buildings that have developed cracks and are badly damaged in Uttarakhand's Joshimath will be demolished from today to protect adjoining buildings, officials have said. Joshimath has been divided into three zones, 'Danger', 'Buffer', and 'Completely Safe', based on the magnitude of danger from land subsidence or the sinking or settling of the ground surface.
 

Joshimath 
 
Over 600 buildings in 'sinking Joshimath' have developed cracks, officials said. The ones that are most damaged will be demolished.
 
 
 
The 'sinking' town has been declared a disaster-prone zone and construction activities have been banned in Joshimath and nearby areas. About 4,000 people have been shifted to safer areas," a senior functionary of the Ministry of Home Affairs told the media. "It seems 30 percent of Joshimath is affected. A report is being compiled by an expert committee and it would be submitted to the Prime Minister's Office," he said. Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami has appealed to everyone to work as a team and save the town. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has also assured full support to the state government. The demolition of the damaged houses was recommended by an expert panel tasked with assessing the land subsidence in Joshimath. The demolition will be carried out under the supervision of a team from the Central Building Research Institute (CBRI), while National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) has been called in to assist them. "Basic facilities in the relief camps arranged for the affected people in Joshimath are being constantly inspected by the administration and all possible help is being extended to the affected people," officials said. Joshimath is called the "winter seat" of Lord Badrinath, whose idol is brought down from the main Badrinath temple to the Vasudeva temple in the town every winter. It is also the gateway to the Sikh holy shrine Hemkund Sahib. Experts have blamed unplanned infrastructure development, including hydropower projects, for the alarming situation.
 
 
Many have pointed to the hydroelectricity project of the National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC) in this connection. Residents have said they wrote to the Chief Minister thrice last month, alerting him about the impact of the blasts in the tunnels of the NTPC project. Cracks in the homes and roads had started appearing due to the blasts a few km from the town, residents wrote in the letters. NTPC has denied any links between its project and the situation in Joshimath. In an official statement, it has said the NTPC tunnel doesn't go under the town and no blasting work is being carried out at the site at this point.