Monsoon Rains, Landslides Claim 50 Lives In India 

Unusually heavy rain and melting glaciers have caused devastating flash floods in the mountains of India

Monsoon Rains, Landslides Claim 50 Lives In India 
Caption: Rescue operation underway for victims at the site of a landslide

Over the course of the weekend, severe monsoon rains in India's Himalayan region caused landslides and flash floods that claimed the lives of more than 50 people. 

More than 20 individuals are still trapped or missing, according to state disaster management authority officials, thus the death toll is sure to climb. 

Over the past year or so, unusually heavy rain and melting glaciers have caused devastating flash floods in the mountains of India, Pakistan, and Nepal, with government officials increasingly attributing this to climate change.

Television footage from India's Himachal Pradesh state showed houses flattened by landslides, buses, and cars hanging on the edge of precipices after roads gave way, and hundreds of people at rescue sites as emergency workers struggled to clear debris.

"Again, tragedy has befallen Himachal Pradesh, with continuous rainfall over the past 48 hours," the state's chief minister, Sukhvinder Singh Sukhu, said in a post on the microblogging platform X, formerly known as Twitter.

Rescue workers remove the debris as they search for survivors after a landslide following torrential rain in Shimla in the northern state of Himachal Pradesh, India, August 14, 2023. — Reuters

Rescue workers remove the debris as they search for survivors after a landslide following torrential rain in Shimla in the northern state of Himachal Pradesh, India, August 14, 2023. — Reuters

"This number can rise further because 20 people are still trapped," he said.

Officials from the state disaster management authority, meanwhile, said that 41 bodies had been recovered by Monday evening.

"Another 13 people are missing but, as time passes, we are losing hope that they will be pulled out alive," said state disaster management official Praveen Bhardwaj.

In one of the most deadly incidents, a temple collapsed in the state capital, Shimla, with rescuers pulling out at least nine bodies, the chief minister said.

In Solan district, houses collapsed, killing at least seven people, and a mother and her child were killed in Mandi district when their house collapsed, Bhardwaj said.

Television footage showed swollen rivers breaking their banks in Himachal and neighbouring Uttarakhand state, where also two people died and four were missing in incidents related to the rains, the Uttarakhand Disaster Management control room told Reuters.

The India Meteorological Department issued a "red alert" for both states on Monday and has forecast rainfall intensity to reduce from Tuesday onwards.

Parts of Himachal and Uttarakhand received as much as 273 mm (10.75 inches) and 419 mm (16.54 inches) of rain in 24 hours till 8:30 am IST (3 am GMT) on Monday, the weather office said.

Schools and other educational institutes were ordered to close in Himachal Pradesh and people in vulnerable areas were being moved to relief shelters, state officials said.

Uttarakhand state authorities announced that the Char Dham pilgrimage route would be closed until Tuesday following landslides.