Clear weather provided an opportunity to the Air Force team to carry our greater number of sorties for relief and rescue operations.
"About 70 students from campuses of SRM University and Vellore Institute of Technology, who had been rescued till yesterday, were today flown out from Arakonnam Base to Delhi. They were assembled at the Tambaram Air Base, from where they were first flown to Arakonnam by Mi-14 choppers, in batches of 20," a senior IAF official told PTI.
VIT Vellore students, who were on their way back home after the end of examinations, were also left stranded at the airport and railway stations for several days until civil or defence help arrived.
"One of the private airlines, which is running a few relief flights from here took about 130 civilians to Delhi in their flight this afternoon. While two flights flew in the morning to Hyderabad and Bangalore routes, three-four more are lined up, but it is not as yet known how many would fly today," a defence official here said.
No sooner had the aircraft touched down in the national capital, students and elderly heaved a sigh of relief.
19-year-old Akhshay Jyoti, son of a retired commander in Navy, was feeling proud and overjoyed, while boarding the flight at the Arakonnam Naval Base, 70 km west of the capital city in Vellore district.
"We were stuck in our university for a few days after the last heavy rain and later a 'Chetak' came and airlifted five of us students.
"We were then brought to the Tambaram Base (nearly 30 km from Chennai) from where we came here today," he said, adding, "I am getting rescued by defence forces on Navy Day and from a Naval base, I couldn't have felt prouder."
The civilians today were also initially said to be flown in a C-17 Globemaster, however, no defence official confirmed the plan.
A C-17 had carried over 100 people to Hyderabad yesterday.
(Reopens DEL 126)
"Our flight was for December 1, and after announcement of delay it was finally cancelled. We all slept at the airport itself as we were expecting a replacement flight next day, but it only got worse from there. Next day evening they shut down the electricity connection, as water was coming to the arrival side, and then by late evening it went pitch dark," Sankalp told
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