* IAF pilot recounts stories of valour in Kedarnath
 Ajay Banerjee
Tribune News Service *
 New Delhi, July 5
As Indian Air Force (IAF) pilots and helicopters retreat in batches from
flood-hit Uttarakhand to their bases, stories of valour that how
helicopters landed at difficult places and evacuated pilgrims are being
talked about.

Wing Commander Nikhil Naidu, who was sent to Uttarakhand on June 18, was
among the first lot of IAF pilots to see the devastated Gaurikund-Kedarnath
stretch, the epicentre of flash floods and mudslides.

Wing Commander Naidu, accompanied by Fight-Lieut Miskeen, Wing Commander S
Gupta and Squadron Leader Gartia, reached Kedarnath at 9 am on June 18.
“The sight of destruction at Rambada, where stranded people had been taking
refuge in heaps of bodies, shocked us,” said Naidu.

“It was very difficult to look for survivors on a narrow Gaurikund and
Kedrnath axis. Rambada village had been completely obliterated by the
disaster. There was no place to land at Jungle Chatti and Gaurikund. Huge
trees and power cables blocked the descent of copters. We touched one of
the skids of our copter on the ground and with no support staff started
evacuation operation,” he said.

“On June 19, two civilians, Bisht and Joginder Rana, also started assisting
the IAF. On June 22, the pilot of a private helicopter informed us about a
couple stranded at an altitude of 10,500 ft. The couple was stuck at a
precarious position with no way to walk down to the nearest makeshift
helipad. It was a decision to be taken to attempt a dangerous operation of
sending an iron cord down to lift up civilians who would be untrained in
being lifted up by a hovering copter. As MET Department had forecast heavy
rains from June 23 and June 24, the evening of June 22 was the last chance
to evacuate the couple,” said Wing Commander Nikhil Naidu.

“They had to be winched using an iron cord and that would be possible only
if there was someone on the ground to strap them in the winch. Joginder
Rana volunteered to help. He was sent down. The high altitude, huge trees
and winds added to the risk. But we managed to save the two lives. The
couple is now recuperating at a hospital in Gujarat. Had this couple
perished, I would have been guilty for the rest of my life.”

He further said, “The valley was narrow. A close coordination between the
pilots and respect for each other’s courage made the task easier.”

Wing Commander Naidu belongs to a family of Armed Forces personnel. His
father Lt Gen ML Naidu has been the Vice-Chief of the Army. His maternal
grandfather Lt Col Bharamanand Avasthi, attained martyrdom in 1962 during a
battle in Arunachal Pradesh, which is known as ‘Last stand at Lha Gyala
Gompa’.



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With best wishes

S Chander

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