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As soon as Unni ‘mash’, as he was dearly called by everyone, set eyes on the pile of rubble, which the area had turned into, he collapsed, unable to withstand the heart-rending sight.
“We had taught these kids not to harm nature, and they also took part in conservation efforts. But nature ultimately took them away,” he was seen talking to reporters.
Unni Mash has been working with the same school for the past 18 years.
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The double-storied school building that once stood majestically along the riverbank, set against a picturesque landscape, at Vellarmala near Meppadi in Wayanad, now lies in ruins.
The wreckage of the school was among the first visuals that came out of the Mundakkai region, which was hit by the recent catastrophic landslide.
“We told the kids, you’re the luckiest students in the world because you get to study beside such a beautiful river. We took too much pride… And got punished for that,” mash cried.
I have nothing more to say, he said.
According to the state government, a total of 49 children from the region are missing in the landslide. Some of them were students at Vellarimala GVHSS.
The school authorities are yet to trace the exact number of students from that school who are missing.
Rescue teams in Kerala’s Wayanad district stepped up search operations on Saturday, deploying advanced radars, drones, and heavy machinery to locate survivors or remains, as the death toll from the catastrophic landslide climbed to 219.