A dream buried with a landslide in Zhyaplekhola

The identities of 11 of the 14 micro-cars from Butwal buried in Jhaplekhola have been revealed, 9 members of the three families who died

Ashwin 13, 2081

Ghanshyam Gautam

A dream buried with a landslide in Zhyaplekhola

We use Google Cloud Translation Services. Google requires we provide the following disclaimer relating to use of this service:

This service may contain translations powered by Google. Google disclaims all warranties related to the translations, expressed or implied, including any warranties of accuracy, reliability, and any implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, and noninfringement.

15-year-old Dipesh and Deepika Bhattarai are twin brothers who died after their microbus was buried in a landslide at Jhyaplekhola in Dhading on Friday night. They had their permanent home in Galyang Municipality-3 of Syangja and were studying in Class 10 at Kalika Humanities School in Kalikanagar, Butwal. Strong in studies, he used to participate in various competitions outside the school.

At the same time, the Astronomy Olympiad Society organized the National Astronomy Olympiad competition on October 17th in Kathmandu. The siblings filled the form online. It was reported that they have been selected for the first round of the 2024 competition.

A dream buried with a landslide in Zhyaplekhola

Twin brothers and sisters Dipesh and Deepika Bhattarai who died in the Jhyaplekhola landslide and their mother Sita . 

After being selected in the first round from Kathmandu, he was able to participate in the competition in Bangladesh for the second round. Students from 32 countries participated in the competition in Bangladesh. Students who became winners in Bangladesh could go to America for other competitions . Dipesh, Deepika and their mother Sita Bhattarai, who had a dream of reaching America after winning the competition, were brought to the Jhaplekhola of Micro Dhading on Friday night. After the car is delivered, their dream of reaching America by proving themselves to be excellent in the competition has also been fulfilled .

According to Dinesh Thapa, Principal of Kalika Humanities Mavi, both schools are excellent students. Along with them, 4 other students from Kalika Humanities School have also gone to participate in the same competition. Although the competition was held on October 17th, other students had already reached Kathmandu.

'The other 4 people had already reached Kathmandu, they kept walking regardless of the rain,' Prof. Thapa said, 'The school has lost two excellent students.' He said that the school family was shocked when the school lost both students. His relative Deepak Banjade said that Homanath, the father of both students, had gone to Korea for employment and was preparing to come to Nepal after learning about the incident.

37-year-old Prakash Kunwar of Butwal sub-metropolitan city-16 Semlar, his wife 34-year-old Anu Malla and 28-year-old sister Srijana Kunwar also died after being buried in the same vehicle. Prakash returned to Nepal from Korea 2 months ago. Married to Anu from Kathmandu on 27th of July . They are from Purkotdah Hills in Madane Rural Municipality of Gulmi and came to Gulmi for a visit after their marriage. After returning from Gulmi, Prakash and Anu registered their marriage.

20 days after Prakash, i.e. on October 18, there was a ticket to return to Korea . Since the other family was in Kathmandu, they had booked tickets on Friday morning to meet and return to Korea from there. After her brother and sister-in-law requested her, her sister, Srijana, also went to Kathmandu together. She also passed B.Sc Nursing from Bangalore, India and was studying language classes to go to UK . Brother Gobind Kunwar said that he went with his brother-in-law to take the language class exam from Kathmandu. 'Well, I can't tell you what happened,' he said on the phone when he reached Bhairahawa Airport to find the body, 'God said that it would take him away.' He said .

63-year-old Juddhabadur Rayamazhi, 28-year-old daughter-in-law Pramita Rayamazhi and 2-year-old grandson Chris Rayamazhi of Charpala, Gulmi Darbar rural municipality, who were riding in the micro No. 1 J 4578, buried in the Jhyaplekhola landslide, also died. All three of them went to Kathmandu to live there as Pramita's husband Vivek runs a motorcycle business.

According to Laxman Karki, an employee of the ticket counter of Paschim Nepal Bus Business Pvt. The identity of Bom Bahadur Magar, Bhimakumari and another person who boarded from Sunwal, who are from Jitpur house, has not been disclosed. The identity of 23-year-old Samoil Gurung, who boarded from Butwal Ramnagar and lives in Kathmandu, has also been revealed.  

Gurung, who lives in Kathmandu, came to visit his grandparents who live in Ramnagar, Butwal. His relative Chandra Gurung said that since graduation exams were on Sunday, he had an accident while going to Kathmandu on Friday morning by car and now his father has found the body. The vehicle was driven by Ramesh Prasad Luintel. He also died in the incident. Karki said that 14 people, including the driver and a 2-year-old child, were in the vehicle, and only 11 of them, including the child, have been identified so far.

Ghanshyam

Link copied successfully