<p>A survivor of the Beas river disaster in Himachal Pradesh Sunday, in which 26 students of a Hyderabad engineering college were washed away, Monday recalled how the river became a "watery grave" within seconds.<br /><br /></p>.<p>"The silent river literally turned into a watery grave within a fraction of seconds," Kiran, one of the survivors and a faculty member of the V.N.R. Vignana Jyothi Institute of Engineering and Technology in Hyderabad, told IANS.<br /><br />At least 24 students, including six girls, of the institute were reported missing after strong currents in the mighty Beas river washed them away.<br /><br />Officials said Monday that five bodies were found in Himachal Pradesh's Mandi district while the fate of 19 others, who were washed away in the flash-flood after water was released from a hydropower project, is still not known.<br /><br />On Monday, the survivors, most of whom are from the plains, said they were baffled after the disaster as nobody from the local administration was there to help them out.<br /><br />Kiran said the students, who were on the way to picturesque tourist resort Manali, were clicking pictures on the banks of the Beas river when the disaster occurred.<br /><br />Another survivor, Ravi Kumar said: "The water level suddenly rose to five or six feet and the students who were close to the river were washed away."<br /><br />He said no help came from the district administration for hours.<br /><br />"If the administration had reacted immediately, 10 to 15 lives could have been saved," an emotional Kumar said.<br /><br />According to him, there were no hoardings to warn the tourists not to go near the flowing water.<br /><br />"Before going into the water, we asked the locals and they said you could go. When the disaster occurred, rather than helping us, they started shouting at us," Kumar added.<br />Aditya, who saved himself, said darkness hampered search operations.<br /><br />"There was no provision of searchlights. The search operation started almost 12 hours after the incident."</p>
<p>A survivor of the Beas river disaster in Himachal Pradesh Sunday, in which 26 students of a Hyderabad engineering college were washed away, Monday recalled how the river became a "watery grave" within seconds.<br /><br /></p>.<p>"The silent river literally turned into a watery grave within a fraction of seconds," Kiran, one of the survivors and a faculty member of the V.N.R. Vignana Jyothi Institute of Engineering and Technology in Hyderabad, told IANS.<br /><br />At least 24 students, including six girls, of the institute were reported missing after strong currents in the mighty Beas river washed them away.<br /><br />Officials said Monday that five bodies were found in Himachal Pradesh's Mandi district while the fate of 19 others, who were washed away in the flash-flood after water was released from a hydropower project, is still not known.<br /><br />On Monday, the survivors, most of whom are from the plains, said they were baffled after the disaster as nobody from the local administration was there to help them out.<br /><br />Kiran said the students, who were on the way to picturesque tourist resort Manali, were clicking pictures on the banks of the Beas river when the disaster occurred.<br /><br />Another survivor, Ravi Kumar said: "The water level suddenly rose to five or six feet and the students who were close to the river were washed away."<br /><br />He said no help came from the district administration for hours.<br /><br />"If the administration had reacted immediately, 10 to 15 lives could have been saved," an emotional Kumar said.<br /><br />According to him, there were no hoardings to warn the tourists not to go near the flowing water.<br /><br />"Before going into the water, we asked the locals and they said you could go. When the disaster occurred, rather than helping us, they started shouting at us," Kumar added.<br />Aditya, who saved himself, said darkness hampered search operations.<br /><br />"There was no provision of searchlights. The search operation started almost 12 hours after the incident."</p>