Current:Home > StocksTeenager saved from stranded Pakistan cable car describes "miracle" rescue: "Tears were in our eyes" -MoneySpot
Teenager saved from stranded Pakistan cable car describes "miracle" rescue: "Tears were in our eyes"
View
Date:2025-04-15 02:52:08
The rescue of six school children and two adults who were plucked from a broken cable car that was dangling precariously 1,000 or so feet above a steep gorge in northern Pakistan was a miracle, a survivor said Wednesday. The teenager said he and the others felt repeatedly that death was imminent during the 16-hour ordeal.
The eight passengers were pulled from the cable car in several rescue attempts Tuesday. One of the youngest children was grabbed by a commando attached to a helicopter by rope. A video of the rescue shows the rope swaying wildly as the child, secured by a harness, is pulled into the helicopter.
Because helicopters could not fly after sunset, rescuers constructed a makeshift chairlift from a wooden bed frame and ropes and approached the cable car using the one cable that was still intact, local police chief Nazir Ahmed said. In the final stage of the risky operation, just before midnight Tuesday, rescuers and volunteers pulled a rope to lower the chairlift to the ground. Joyful shouts of "God is great" erupted as the chairlift came into view, carrying two boys in traditional white robes.
"I had heard stories about miracles, but I saw a miraculous rescue happening with my own eyes," said 15-year-old Osama Sharif, one of the six boys who were in the cable car.
Locally made cable cars are a widely used form of transportation in the mountainous Battagram district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. Gliding across steep valleys, they cut down travel time but often are poorly maintained and accident prone. Every year people die or are injured while traveling in them.
On Tuesday morning, the six boys got into the cable car to travel to their school across the ravine from their village. Osama said he was headed to school to receive the result of his final exam.
"We suddenly felt a jolt, and it all happened so suddenly that we thought all of us are going to die," Osama said in a telephone interview.
He said some of the children and the two adults had cellphones and started making calls. Worried parents tried to reassure the children.
"They were telling us don't worry, help is coming," he said. After several hours, the passengers saw helicopters flying in the air, and at one point a commando using a rope came very close to the cable car.
But the choppers also added an element of danger. The air currents churned up by the whirling blades risked weakening the only cable preventing the cable car from crashing to the bottom of the river canyon.
"We cried, and tears were in our eyes, as we feared the cable car will go down," Osama said.
Eventually a helicopter plucked one of the youngest children from the cable car, he said. Then, the makeshift chairlift arrived, first to give them food and water, followed by the rescue.
Ahmed, the local police chief, said the children received oxygen as a precaution before being handed over to their parents, many of whom burst into tears of joy.
An estimated 30,000 people live in Battagram and nearly 8,000 gathered to watch the rescue operation, with many volunteering to help.
On Wednesday, authorities were preparing to repair the broken cable car.
Ata Ullah, another rescued student, said cable cars are the only way residents can reach offices and schools.
"I feel fear in my mind about using the cable car, but I have no other option. I will go to my school again when the cable car is repaired," he said.
In 2017, 10 people were killed when a cable car fell hundreds of yards into a ravine in the popular mountain resort of Murree after its cable broke.
- In:
- Pakistan
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- New tower at surfing venue in Tahiti blowing up again as problem issue for Paris Olympic organizers
- Home sales snapped a five-month skid in November as easing mortgage rates encouraged homebuyers
- Tom Schwartz’s Holiday Gift Ideas Will Get You Vanderpumped for Christmas
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Patrick Mahomes’ Wife Brittany Claps Back at “Rude” Comments, Proving Haters Gonna Hate, Hate, Hate
- New protections for very old trees: The rules cover a huge swath of the US
- Body wrapped in tire chains in Kentucky lake identified as man who disappeared in 1999
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Newest toys coming to McDonald's Happy Meals: Squishmallows
Ranking
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- What to know about the Colorado Supreme Court's Trump ruling, and what happens next
- Memo to Peyton Manning: The tush push is NOT banned in your son's youth football league
- Abuse in the machine: Study shows AI image-generators being trained on explicit photos of children
- Average rate on 30
- No fire plans, keys left out and no clean laundry. Troubled South Carolina jail fails inspection
- Overly broad terrorist watchlist poses national security risks, Senate report says
- DNA may link Philadelphia man accused of slashing people on trail to a cold-case killing, police say
Recommendation
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
What to know about Jeter Downs, who Yankees claimed on waivers from Nationals
Former Chelsea owner Abramovich loses legal action against EU sanctions
Top French TV personality faces preliminary charge of rape: What to know
Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
Former Alabama correctional officer is sentenced for assaulting restrained inmate and cover-up
Tesla’s Swedish labor dispute pits anti-union Musk against Scandinavian worker ideals
Florida man threw 16-year-old dog in dumpster after pet's owners died, police say