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Iraq condemns US strikes that killed Iran-aligned fighters

Baghdad (Reuters) – Iraq’s government condemned overnight U.S. airstrikes south of Baghdad that killed eight members of Iran-aligned Iraqi armed group Kataib Hezbollah, saying they were a “dangerous escalation” not coordinated with authorities.

The U.S. has carried out two series of strikes in Iraq since Tuesday, in response to more than 60 attacks by Iran-aligned militias against forces in the region, and destroyed a Kataib Hezbollah operations centre and a command and control node.

Until this week, the United States had been reluctant to retaliate in Iraq because of the delicate political situation in Baghdad, where they have sought closer cooperation, and in an effort to avoid regional spillover from the Gaza war.

The U.S. had previously undertaken three separate sets of strikes in Syria in response to the attacks, which began on Oct. 17 and have been linked by Iraqi militia groups to U.S. support for Israel in its bombardment of Gaza following attacks by Palestinian militant group Hamas on Israel.

Kataib Hezbollah said the strikes in Iraq killed eight of its members in its stronghold of Jurf al-Sakhar, south of Baghdad.

In a statement, it threatened to attack a wider array of targets if U.S. strikes continued.

The Iraqi government condemned the U.S. strikes as “a clear violation of sovereignty and an attempt to disrupt the stable internal security situation,” while also noting attacks by armed groups went against Iraq’s national interest.

It said in a statement that the strikes were a violation of the advisory role of international forces in Iraq to fight the remnants of the Islamic State militant group – a coalition that a number of factions in Iraq’s Shi’ite Muslim ruling coalition say they want ousted.

About 24 hours earlier, U.S. forces were attacked by close-range ballistic missiles at Ain al-Asad airbase west of Baghdad, resulting in eight injuries and minor infrastructure damage, U.S. officials said.

A U.S. military AC-130 aircraft responded in self-defence, killing Iranian-backed militants, the U.S. officials said.

Kataib Hezbollah said one their members was killed in that strike.

The group is part of Iraq’s Popular Mobilisation Forces (PMF), a group of many mainly Shi’ite Muslim armed groups that was formed in 2014 to fight Islamic State and subsequently recognised as an official security agency by Iraq’s government.

Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani has limited control over some Iran-backed factions, whose support he needed to win power a year ago and who now form a powerful bloc in his governing coalition. Many of the factions also do not see eye-to-eye on actions against U.S. forces.

The United States has 900 troops in Syria and 2,500 in Iraq on a mission it says aims to advise and assist local forces trying to prevent a resurgence of Islamic State, which in 2014 seized large swaths of both countries before being defeated.

Major events during seven weeks of war between Israel and Hamas

(Reuters) – Israel and Hamas have agreed to a ceasefire in Gaza for at least four days, to let in aid and release at least 50 hostages captured by militants in exchange for at least 150 Palestinians jailed in Israel.

The following is a timeline of the war between Israel and Hamas, the Islamist movement which controls the Gaza Strip.

Oct. 7: Hamas gunmen launch a surprise attack on southern Israel, crossing over from Gaza and rampaging through towns. Israel says the gunmen kill 1,200 people, mainly civilians, and take more than 240 hostages.

Hamas military commander Mohammad Deif announces on Hamas media that the attack has started and urges Palestinians everywhere to fight.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says Israel is “at war” and retaliatory air strikes against Hamas-run Gaza begin, along with a total siege of the narrow coastal enclave squeezed between Israel and Egypt.

Oct. 13: Israel tells residents of Gaza City, where more than 1 million of the enclave’s 2.3 million people live, to evacuate and move south. Gaza remains closed and residents say they have nowhere to go after southern parts of the Strip are bombarded.

Oct. 17: An explosion at al-Ahli al-Arabi Baptist hospital in Gaza City causes heavy casualties and triggers outrage in the Arab world. Palestinians blame the blast on an Israeli air strike but Israel says it was caused by a misfiring Palestinian rocket launch.

The health ministry in Gaza says 471 people were killed. Israel disputes this figure and an unclassified U.S. intelligence report estimates the death toll “at the low end of the 100 to 300 spectrum”.

Oct. 18: U.S. President Joe Biden visits the Middle East to show support for Israel and prevent a wider regional conflict. He ascribes the hospital blast to an errant rocket fired by Gaza militants. Arab leaders respond to the deaths at the hospital, which they blame on Israel, by cancelling a summit with Biden in Jordan.

Oct. 20: Hamas releases two American hostages – Judith Tai Raanan, 59, and her daughter Natalie, 17. The women were taken from Nahal Oz kibbutz in southern Israel.

Oct. 21: Aid trucks are allowed through the Rafah border crossing from Egypt into Gaza after days of diplomatic wrangling. It is only a small fraction of what is required in Gaza, where food, water, medicines and fuel are running out.

Oct. 23: Hamas releases two more hostages, elderly Israelis Nurit Cooper and Yocheved Lifshitz, “on humanitarian and poor health grounds”. The two women were kidnapped from Nir Oz kibbutz in southern Israel with their husbands, who are still held by Hamas. As she is freed, Lifshitz shakes hands with one of the militants and says “shalom” (peace).

Oct. 26: Israeli forces carry out their biggest raid into Gaza so far, with tanks and infantry hitting infrastructure and anti-tank missile launch posts.

Oct. 27: Israel’s chief military spokesman says Israeli ground forces are expanding their operations inside Gaza, signalling the start of a ground offensive.

Oct. 28: Netanyahu says Israeli forces have begun the second phase of the war and says Israel will “destroy the enemy above ground and below ground.” He tells Israelis to expect a “long and hard” military campaign.

Oct. 31: Israeli air strikes hit Gaza’s densely populated Jabalia refugee camp. Israel says it has killed a Hamas commander. Palestinian health officials say the strike killed about 50 people and wounded 150.

Nov. 1: Evacuations from Gaza begin through the Rafah crossing for an estimated 7,000 foreign passport holders, dual nationals and their dependents, and people needing urgent medical treatment.

Nov. 6: U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres says Gaza is becoming a “graveyard for children”, and demands a ceasefire. Palestinian health authorities say the death toll from Israeli strikes has exceeded 10,000.

Nov. 13: Israeli tanks advance on Gaza City’s Al Shifa hospital, with some 650 patients still inside. Israel says the hospital sits atop tunnels housing a headquarters for Hamas fighters using patients as shields, which Hamas denies.

Nov. 15: Israeli special forces enter Al Shifa Hospital and search the site, which covers more than 20 acres, with patients still inside. They initially uncover only a small collection of weapons but in the following days find the entrance to a concrete-walled tunnel and show footage of what they say is a 55-metre section, 10 metres underground.

Charges of war crimes are exchanged on both sides, with Palestinians accusing Israel of targeting civilians and Israel saying militant groups use civilians as human shields.

Nov. 21: Israel and Hamas announce agreement on a four-day pause in fighting. Netanyahu’s office says 50 women and children will be released and that the pause will be extended by another day for every additional 10 hostages released.

Hamas says the 50 hostages will be released in exchange for 150 Palestinian women and children detainees in Israel, and that humanitarian, medical and fuel aid will be allowed into Gaza.

Gaza’s Hamas-run government says at least 13,300 Palestinians have been confirmed killed, including at least 5,600 children, in the Israeli bombardment.

Another Israel-Hamas prisoner swap will take place this month – Palestinian official

Dubai (Reuters) – The Israel-Hamas deal agreed on Wednesday for the freeing of 50 hostages held in Gaza in exchange for the release of 150 Palestinian prisoners will be repeated later this month, a Palestinian official told Reuters.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that would mean a total release of 100 of the around 240 people Hamas seized during its Oct. 7 killing spree in southern Israel.

In return, Israel would free a total of 300 Palestinian prisoners in the two exchanges – a number corresponding to a list of women and teenaged male inmates it published on Wednesday as candidates.

A part of the current deal, which is due to begin on Thursday, Israel will pause its almost seven-week-old Gaza war to enable both the staggered recovery of the 50 hostages – all of them women or children – and entry of aid for Palestinians.

“The second batch will follow the first batch. They would need four or five days to organise it will involve 50 Israeli (hostages) in return for 150 Palestinian (prisoners),” the Palestinian official said. He said the prisoners would include elderly, women and children and the conditions will be the same.

Israeli officials did not immediately confirm this. But Israel has offered, in a cabinet statement, to extend the pause by a day for every additional 10 hostages handed over by Hamas.

Explainer: What do we know about Israeli hostages in Gaza?

(Reuters) – The Israeli government voted on Wednesday to back a deal to release some of roughly 240 Israeli hostages held by Hamas militants in Gaza in exchange for a multi-day truce and the freeing of a greater number of Palestinian prisoners in Israel.

Here is what we know about the hostages.

Who Are The Hostages?

Gunmen from the Palestinian group Hamas took about 240 hostages and killed 1,200 people when they raided Israel on Oct. 7, according to the Israeli government. The hostages were from communities, including collective farms, called kibbutzim and military bases in southern Israel as well as people attending an outdoor music festival.

In addition to Israeli citizens, more than half the hostages held foreign and dual citizenship from some 40 countries including the U.S., Thailand, Britain, France, Argentina, Germany, Chile, Spain and Portugal, Israel’s government has said.

According to Israeli media and the Israeli government, up to 40 hostages being held are children, including a 10-month-old baby and preschoolers.

Also among those taken were soldiers, elderly people and people with disabilities.

What Has Happened To The Hostages?

Hamas has to date released four captives: U.S. citizens Judith Raanan, 59, and her daughter, Natalie Raanan, 17, on Oct. 20, citing “humanitarian reasons,” and Israeli women Nurit Cooper, 79, and Yocheved Lifshitz, 85, on Oct. 23.

Israeli forces freed one hostage, Ori Megidish, a soldier, in their ground invasion of Gaza on Oct. 30.

The Israeli military said earlier this month that it recovered the bodies of two hostages in Gaza City, including 19-year-old soldier Noa Marciano.

The armed wing of the Palestinian militant group Islamic Jihad, which participated in the Oct. 7 raid with Hamas, announced late on Tuesday the death of another Israeli hostage but did not identify the individual.

Where Are The Hostages Being Held?

Hamas has said it has hidden the captives in “safe places and tunnels” in Gaza. Israel says the group has a vast underground network where it stores weapons, commands operations and uses tunnels to move its fighters.

Lifshitz, an 85-year-old grandmother who was freed by Hamas, said that after she was seized, she was taken into underground tunnels that she compared to a spider web.

The Israeli military has said it found evidence that some hostages were held at or under hospitals.

The Israel Defence Forces said on Sunday that Marciano, the soldier whose body was recovered, was killed by Hamas within Al Shifa hospital. The military released video that it said also showed militants forcing two hostages into Shifa hospital on Oct. 7.

What Have Conditions Been Like For Hostages?

Lifshitz said her captors separated hostages into small groups. She said she and a few others with her slept on mattresses on the floor of the tunnels. Doctors provided care and Hamas ensured conditions were hygienic, she said.

In a video released by Hamas in October, a 21-year-old French hostage was shown having her injured arm treated by a medical worker.

Hamas released another video in October that showed three women hostages denouncing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. He said they were used for “cruel propaganda”.

How Have Israelis Reacted To The Hostage Taking?

Family members and thousands of supporters have pressured the Israeli government to prioritise freeing the hostages, fearing they could be killed in Israel’s retaliatory assault on Gaza.

A five-day march culminated on Saturday with some 20,000 people on the main Tel Aviv-Jerusalem highway calling on the government to win their freedom. Many Israelis blame the government for being blindsided by the Hamas assault.

Netanyahu has vowed to bring the hostages home.

(This story has been corrected to remove reference to the 17-year-old girl, who was initially thought to be held hostage but whose remains were found inside Israel, in paragraph 6)

Palestinian women and youths to be swapped for Israeli hostages

Ramallah(Reuters) – Dozens of Palestinian women and teenagers held prisoner by Israel for periods of a few months to several years will gain their freedom under Wednesday’s deal for the release of 50 Israeli hostages held in Gaza by the Islamist group Hamas.

Jubilant reunions are expected when Palestinian families greet the prisoners on their return as early as Thursday, most of them to their homes in the occupied West Bank and Jerusalem.

Arrested for such offences as attempted stabbings, stone throwings at Israeli soldiers or having contacts with hostile organisations, many were held under administrative detention, meaning Israel held them without trial.

In contrast to previous prisoner swaps, notably the deal under which Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit was released by Hamas in 2011, none has been convicted of murdering Israelis.

In that deal, Israel released more than 1,000 prisoners, some convicted of murder, including Yahya Sinwar, the Hamas leader in the Gaza Strip and one of those held responsible by Israel for a deadly Oct. 7 Hamas assault on Israel.

The Qatari-brokered accord was the first concrete sign of any halt to the fighting which began with the Oct. 7 attack by hundreds of Hamas gunmen, who seized around 240 Israelis and foreigners as hostages.

Israel has agreed to a four-day truce, the entry of aid to Gaza and the release of 150 Palestinian prisoners in return for the hostages, all children or women.

Another 150 Palestinian prisoners could be freed in return for another 50 hostages in days to come, a Palestinian official said.

“The release of a number of our prisoners during the war is a very important thing,” said Qadura Fares, head of the Palestinian Authority’s Commission for Prisoners’ Affairs.

“This deal could be a start to change the general atmosphere of this war,” he said.

The Palestinian Authority lost control of Gaza during a 2007 power struggle with Hamas but it regards the besieged enclave as part of a future Palestinian state that includes the West Bank with East Jerusalem as its capital.

It was still unclear exactly who would be released. Israel has issued a list of 300 names, to accommodate potential objections to certain individuals as well as the possibility that the swap could grow beyond its original scale.

For Fares, the main significance of the accord is as a step to a wider end to hostilities.

“The resistance didn’t call this deal a swap deal but it is a deal for truce and ceasefire,” he said.

Iran’s barring of inspectors is serious blow to IAEA’s work, Grossi says

Vienna(Reuters) – Iran’s barring of some of the U.N. nuclear watchdog’s most experienced and expert inspectors from the team allowed to operate there is a “very serious blow” to the agency’s work, the watchdog’s chief Rafael Grossi said on Wednesday.

Tehran informed the International Atomic Energy Agency in September that it was taking the step, known as de-designation. The IAEA said at the time that while Iran is allowed to do that, the way it was done was unprecedented and harmful to its work.

“It’s a very serious blow to our capacity to do that,” Grossi told a news conference when asked to what extent the move had affected the IAEA’s ability to carry out meaningful inspections in Iran. He is urging Tehran to reconsider.

Uranium enrichment is the heart of Iran’s nuclear programme, and the process by which uranium is purified to levels as high as 60%, close to the roughly 90% that is weapons-grade. Iran denies seeking nuclear weapons but no other state has enriched to that level without producing them.

The IAEA will not say how many inspectors were de-designated. Diplomats put the number at slightly more than a handful. While that is a fraction of the more than 100 inspectors assigned to Iran, they are among the IAEA’s top experts on uranium enrichment, officials said.

One diplomat put the number of inspectors barred in this wave at eight, all of them French and German. That left only one enrichment expert in the team assigned to Iran, they added.

One senior diplomat put the number of other enrichment experts available with the required know-how at probably fewer than five.

“There are not many countries with this type of expertise. And normally countries where this expertise exists are very reluctant to release the expertise. They also were inspectors that were familiar with the facilities, had been there for years inspecting the facilities,” the senior diplomat said, referring to the de-designated inspectors.

The importance of that experience was illustrated in January when an inspector noticed a subtle but substantial change to a cascade, or cluster, of uranium-enriching centrifuges that Iran had failed to inform the IAEA of. That change caused a spike in the enrichment level to 83.7%, a record.

The inspector who spotted that change, a Russian enrichment expert, was de-designated later this year, shortly before the others, numerous diplomats said.

Lebanon mourns two journalists killed in Israeli air strike

Beirut (Reuters) – Hundreds of mourners paid their respects in Beirut on Wednesday to two reporters working for pan-Arab station Al Mayadeen who were killed the previous day in an Israeli air strike on south Lebanon.

The crowds gathered around the two coffins of correspondent Farah Omar and camera operator Rabih al-Maamari, both draped in Lebanese flags and topped with wreaths of flowers, outside the Al Mayadeen headquarters in Beirut.

The Committee to Protect Journalists said deaths added to a toll of over 50 journalists killed covering the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza and its spillover to other regions including the Lebanon-Israel border area, where Israeli and Lebanese Hezbollah forces have been exchanging fire since Oct. 7.

Al Mayadeen accused Israel of deliberately targeting the TV crew because the channel was known to be pro-Palestinian and supportive of Iran’s regional military alliance, which includes Gaza’s ruling Hamas movement.

Caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati on Wednesday called the killing of the two journalists an “assassination”.

Israel’s military said it was “aware of a claim regarding journalists … who were killed as a result of (Israeli army) fire…This is an area with active hostilities, where exchange of fire occur. Presence in the area is dangerous”.

Al Mayadeen said the Israeli strike occurred near the town of Tayr Harfa, about a mile from the Israeli frontier. A third person, who was not working with the channel but was accompanying them as they filmed, was also killed.

Wednesday marked 80 years since Lebanon’s independence from France. In a written statement, veteran parliament speaker Nabih Berri said: “On independence day this year, minutes or even eternities of silence are not enough to mourn” the two Al Mayadeen reporters and others killed by Israel’s military.

Caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati on Wednesday called the killing of the two journalists an “assassination”.

The Israeli military has previously said it cannot guarantee journalists’ safety in areas of military activity. Israeli authorities have sought to block Al Mayadeen’s websites and seize equipment linked to the station.

On Nov. 13, pan Arab network Al-Jazeera said one of its crew members was lightly wounded in Israeli shelling on the border town of Yaroun.

Israeli grandfather’s anxiety peaks as Gaza hostage release looms

Kibbutz Gvulot (Reuters) – Exhausted by weeks of worry and vigils, Gilad Korngold drew just a measure of comfort from the foreign-mediated deal between Israel and Hamas to return some hostages held in the Gaza Strip.

He still awaits word that any of his seven relatives, including his three-year-old granddaughter, who were seized by Palestinian gunmen during an Oct 7 killing spree in south Israel, are named on the list of 50 women and children slated to go free, possibly as soon as Thursday.

Korngold’s son, Tal, would presumably not qualify. His daughter-in-law Adi and grandchildren Nave and Yahel presumably would, as would Adi’s mother Shoshan, her aunt Sharon and her niece Noam. But there is no guarantee of their inclusion.

Nor is their health condition or location clear. Hamas has said that dozens of the around 240 hostages have been killed during Israel’s Gaza counter-offensive. Some of the hostages are held by Palestinian groups other than Hamas, though it governs Gaza.

“We need to know they are alive, if they’re okay. It’s the minimum,” 63-year-old Korngold said in the temporary home to which he moved after his nearby village was ravaged by Hamas.

“I want everybody back. But I think – and it’s a very tough decision – but I think the children and women must be (first). they’re most fragile. You know, they need to get out.”

Such sentiments have been echoed by family members of some of the other Israelis likely to be left out of the current deal, under which the Gaza war will be suspended for four days, and 150 Palestinian security prisoners freed. The 50 recovered hostages would represent around half of women and children held.

Israel has offered to extend the pause in fighting further – a day for every additional 10 hostages handed over. But, for now, not even the first release roster has been made public.

Korngold, another three of whose relatives were killed outright by the Hamas marauders, has been campaigning daily to promote the hostage issue in Israel and abroad. The stress means he struggles to rest.

“I need to take sleeping pills. Strong ones, so (I get) at least four or five hours of sleep. If not, I can’t handle it,” he said.

“Nobody can imagine how we feel. Imagine that your kid instead of sleeping in the bed with a blanket … is underground, deep, in deep tunnels. She’s three years old, my girl, my granddaughter.”

So far just five hostages have been recovered alive. One of them said Hamas had held her, and two-dozen others, in a buried warren of tunnels. Those secret passages, which serve as subterranean Hamas citadels, are a focus of Israel’s heavy military strikes.

As part of the hostage deal, Israel agreed to allow more humanitarian aid, and some fuel, into the besieged Gaza Strip. Korngold chafed at that idea as long as the most vulnerable of hostages remained in captivity.

“We ask: Release the children and the women at once. It’s impossible to bargain with children,” he said. “No food, no gasoline, no diesel, nothing. Children and women must be released immediately.”

India orders safety audit of tunnels after collapse in Himalayas

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New Delhi (Reuters) – The National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) will carry out a safety audit of more than two dozen tunnels it is building after one such tunnel in the Himalayas collapsed this month, trapping 41 construction workers, the government said on Wednesday.

Rescuers have been battling to pull out the 41 men stuck in a 4.5-km (3-mile) tunnel in the mountainous Uttarakhand state since it caved in early on Nov. 12.

Authorities have not said what caused the collapse, but the region is prone to landslides, earthquakes and floods.

The construction spree has been questioned by some environmental experts who fear damage to the fragile Himalayan ecosystem and on grounds of safety.

“To ensure safety and adherence to the highest quality standards during construction, NHAI will undertake safety audit of all 29 under construction tunnels across the country,” the government said in a statement. The NHAI is a federal body which builds and manages a network of national highways.

NHAI officials along with others from the Delhi Metro Rail Corporation will inspect ongoing tunnel projects and submit a report in seven days, it added.

These would include 12 tunnels in the Himalayan state of Himachal Pradesh, six in the Jammu and Kashmir region, and the rest in other states including Uttarakhand.

Controversial Project

The collapsed tunnel is located on the Char Dham pilgrimage route, one of the most ambitious projects of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government.

It aims to connect four important Hindu pilgrimage sites of North India through 890 kms (550 miles) of two-lane road being built at a cost of $1.5 billion.

Environmentalists and residents have blamed rapid construction, including the Char Dham project, for land subsidence incidents in the region.

“The Char Dham project was planned in a hurried manner,” said Ravi Chopra, an environmentalist, alleging that necessary precautions were not taken in the area which is known for limestone rocks, which dissolve in water, weakening the structure.

The federal government has said it employed environmentally friendly techniques in the design to make geologically unstable areas safer.

Chopra, who headed a Supreme Court-appointed expert panel to study the impact of the project, had resigned from the committee, saying he was frustrated its recommendations were not implemented.

“The kind of geological investigation that should have been done, was not done,” he told Reuters.

Indian rescuers close in on workers trapped in Himalayan tunnel

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Silkyara (Reuters) – Rescuers hope to drill through the last third of the debris blocking a collapsed tunnel in the Indian Himalayas by early on Thursday to reach 41 workers trapped for ten days, an official said, so long as there are no new hurdles.

The men have been stuck in the 4.5-km (3-mile) tunnel in Uttarakhand state since it caved in early on Nov. 12 and are safe, authorities have said, with access to light, oxygen, food, water and medicines.

Authorities have not said what caused the tunnel collapse, but the region is prone to landslides, earthquakes and floods. Efforts to bring the men out have been slowed by snags in drilling in the mountainous terrain.

By Wednesday, rescuers drilled through 42 m (130 ft) of an estimated 60 m (197 ft) that need to be cleared in order to push through a pipe wide enough for the men to crawl out, said Mahmood Ahmed, an official of the firm building the tunnel.

“Many hurdles can emerge, but if they don’t, we hope that by late in the night or early tomorrow we all will get some good news,” Ahmed, the managing director of the National Highways and Infrastructure Development Corporation (NHIDCL), told reporters.

Possible obstructions in the debris could include large boulders, stones and metal girders, he said, adding that welding together the evacuation pipe needed more time than drilling.

A rescue mission is currently underway at the Silkyara tunnel in Uttarakhand to free 41 workers who are stuck inside following a landslide.
A rescue mission is currently underway at the Silkyara tunnel in Uttarakhand to free 41 workers who are stuck inside following a landslide.

First images from within the tunnel showed workers in white and yellow hardhats standing in the confined space and communicating with rescuers on Tuesday, after a medical endoscopy camera was pushed through a smaller pipeline.

The trapped men have been receiving fruits and cooked food items after a second, larger pipeline was pushed through on Monday.

Toiletries and clothing have also been pushed through, said

Neeraj Khairwal, a rescue co-ordination official.

“The workers are very positive and they are in a very good mental state,” he added.

Physicians and chest specialists are among 15 doctors at the site, said R.C.S. Panwar, the district’s chief medical officer, with 40 ambulances set to be placed on standby.

The anxious families of 11 of the 41 trapped men have reached the accident site, eager to see them rescued. Those trapped are low-wage workers, most of them from poor states in India’s north and east.

“I am worried, and will be worried, while my brother is not out of this tunnel, but now it looks like the time has come,” said Indrajeet Kumar, who travelled from the eastern state of Jharkhand, worried about his trapped brother, Vishwajeet.