ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Army launched a rescue operation on Tuesday after eight people including six children were stranded in a chairlift hundreds of meters in the air after its cable broke in northwestern Pakistan, a spokesperson for the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province (PDMA) said.
The National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) said a local transportation chairlift was stuck at an altitude of around 900 feet when its cable broke in Battagram district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
The office of the Battagram Deputy Commissioner told Arab News the incident took place at 8:00 am on Tuesday as six students and two local residents were using the chairlift to cross the valley to get to school. The chairlift is operated privately by locals to facilitate transportation across the river due to the absence of roads or bridges in the remote northern region.
“After the initial assessment by the military helicopter, the army’s quick response team was called to take part in the difficult and delicate rescue operation as the chairlift is dangling on only one wire,” Taimur Ali, a PDMA spokesperson for KP, told Arab News. “The rescue operation by the army team started a short ago and we are hopeful to save all lives.”
He said Rescue 1122 and district administration teams had already reached the spot but were unable to do much due to the height of the chairlift.
The risky operation was being conducted with a “careful and deliberate approach” as even a slight imbalance in the lift and the aerial pressure of the helicopter could lead to the cable snapping, Ali added.
Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar has directed NDMA, PDMA, and other rescue agencies to mobilize all resources for the rescue mission. He also called for setting up “stringent safety measures” on all chairlifts in mountainous regions and ordered the closure of units that did not meet safety requirements.
According to a statement by a security source privy to the development, the army has decided to continue the operation even in the dark.
“Now it has been decided to continue the rescue operation from the ground so that the operation can be continued even in the darkness of the night,” the source said on condition of anonymity.