Soldiers missing after Siachen avalanche

Pakistani military personnel use heavy machinery as they search for avalanche victims during an ongoing operation at Gayari camp near the Siachen glacier on April 18, 2012. Rescuers are still searching for nearly 140 soldiers buried by the mass of snow and rock at Gayari camp near the Siachen glacier, 4,000 metres above sea level. More than 450 rescuers are working at the site near the de facto border with India in the militarised region of Kashmir, though experts have said there is virtually no chance of finding any survivors. AFP PHOTO / AAMIR QURESHI / AFP / AAMIR QURESHI

Pakistani military personnel use heavy machinery as they search for avalanche victims during an ongoing operation at Gayari camp near the Siachen glacier on April 18, 2012. Rescuers are still searching for nearly 140 soldiers buried by the mass of snow and rock at Gayari camp near the Siachen glacier, 4,000 metres above sea level. More than 450 rescuers are working at the site near the de facto border with India in the militarised region of Kashmir, though experts have said there is virtually no chance of finding any survivors. AFP PHOTO / AAMIR QURESHI / AFP / AAMIR QURESHI

Published Feb 3, 2016

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Srinagar, India - Indian helicopters and rescue teams searched on Wednesday for 10 soldiers missing in northern mountains and presumed trapped in an avalanche, in an area known as the battleground on the roof of the world.

The victims were missing in one of the world's most unforgiving environments, at an altitude of 5 974 metres on the Siachen Glacier that India and Pakistan have fought over intermittently for years, beginning in 1984.

The soldiers, including a junior commissioned officer, disappeared after an avalanche swept down the mountain striking their post, India's defence ministry said in a statement.

“Rescue operations by specialised teams from army and air force are underway to rescue the soldiers,” the ministry said.

The Siachen Glacier in the Karakorum range is known as the highest militarised zone in the world.

Thousands of Indian and Pakistani troops contest an area at altitudes above 20 000 feet where they must deal with altitude sickness, high winds, frostbite and temperatures as low as minus 60 degrees Celsius.

Military experts say the inhospitable climate and avalanche-prone terrain have claimed more lives than gunfire.

The strategic importance of the glacier is widely seen as insignificant.

Until 1984, neither side had troops permanently stationed there.

Both countries agree on a need to demilitarise the glacier, but attempts to reach any agreement have been unsuccessful.

Siachen is in the northern part of the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir, the main source of the two nations' almost seven-decade-old hostilities and the cause of two of their three wars.

Reuters

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