HomeNewsIndiaTeesta flood: 150 labourers at Railway construction site miss death by whisker

Teesta flood: 150 labourers at Railway construction site miss death by whisker

Approximately 150 laborers, working on tunnel construction for the Indian Railways near the Sikkim-West Bengal border, were rescued just in time before the rising Teesta waters swept away their camp and belongings on that fateful Wednesday morning.

October 07, 2023 / 13:10 IST
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Approximately 150 laborers, working on tunnel construction for the Indian Railways near the Sikkim-West Bengal border, were rescued just in time before the rising Teesta waters swept away their camp and belongings on that fateful Wednesday morning.
Approximately 150 laborers, working on tunnel construction for the Indian Railways near the Sikkim-West Bengal border, were rescued just in time before the rising Teesta waters swept away their camp and belongings on that fateful Wednesday morning.

Around 150 labourers engaged in constructing tunnels for the Indian Railways near the Sikkim-West Bengal border got a new life on that fateful Wednesday morning as they were rescued minutes before the raging Teesta waters washed away their camp and almost all of their belongings.

Officers of a private construction company, for which the labourers work, rushed to their colony with vehicles just in time after learning about the impending calamity and saved the sleeping workers from certain death.

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The gushing water of the Teesta destroyed the camp near Zero Mile area, around 2 km from Rambi Bazar in West Bengal’s Kalimpong district, with only the roofs of some of their cottages visible now as the rest went under several feet of slush. As they woke up from deep slumber after a hard day’s work by phone calls from the office asking them to pack their bags in a hurry only with essentials and leave the riverside camp, it took them a while for the seriousness of the matter to sink in.

Finally, with the help of a security guard sent to fetch them, they took another route, an unfamiliar one, to save time and reached the nearest motorable road around 20 minutes later. When they looked back from the safety of the road, the raging river was engulfing the camp, washing away everything. The devastation of nature and the relief of being alive brought tears to their eyes.”We cried our hearts out as we saw our huts going underwater. It was hard to believe that I was fast asleep at the same spot just 15-20 minutes ago. I am thankful to the almighty for saving us all,” Shibyendu Das, a 32-year-old labourer who worked there told PTI over the phone.