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[VIDEOS] Worldwide natural disasters thread

Quake jolts Quetta, surrounding areas

QUETTA: The provincial capital of Quetta and its surrounding areas were jolted by an earthquake measuring 4.6 on the Richter scale on Saturday.

The quake struck at around 11:10am, forcing the residents to evacuate their homes and seek refuge in open spaces.

The tremors were not only felt in Quetta but also in the surrounding areas, according to the Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD). The earthquake’s epicentre was traced back to the Hindu Kush region of Afghanistan.

The National Seismic Monitoring Centre reported that the quake originated at a depth of 98 kilometres.

Despite the widespread panic, officials confirmed that there were no reports of human casualties or property damage in any area of the provincial capital.

However, some residents claimed that the quake caused cracks in some mud houses in the outskirts of the city.
 
Colombia landslide death toll rises to 36

The death toll from recent landslides in northwestern Colombia rose to 36, according to an official tally Sunday, as rescuers continued to look for at least seven people.

Earlier, officials had put the toll from Friday’s landslides, which hit a road linking the cities of Medellin and Quibdo, at 23 dead.

“To all the families of the victims, my heartfelt condolences,” said President Gustavo Petro.

Pope Francis also offered prayers for the victims from the Vatican. Rescuers, using sniffer dogs and bulldozers, have been racing against the clock to find survivors.

Videos shared on social media showed part of a mountain breaking loose and crashing down onto a line of cars, as screams broke out.

The landslides in Colombia’s Choco department, which lies on the Pacific Ocean, followed more than 24 hours of intense rain.

The Ombudsman’s Office warned of “high risk of new landslides.”

“We call for all necessary actions to be taken in order to safeguard the lives of people who are at risk in the area,” the office said in a bulletin.

A landslide in the same part of Colombia in December 2022 killed at least 27 people, trapping people in a bus and other vehicles.

While much of Colombia is suffering through drought, meteorologists have warned of the risk of heavy rains in several departments bordering the Pacific.

Source: Business Recorder

 
Iceland volcano latest: Lava inside town - after 'worst-case scenario' hits; official warns of 'daunting time' for Iceland

An area of southwestern Iceland has had its second volcanic eruption in less than a month, with lava sent spewing towards nearby Grindavik. The president has said the country faces a "daunting period" as it battles "tremendous forces of nature" in the town.



SKY News
 
About 1,000 tourists trapped in China's Xinjiang after avalanches

Around 1,000 tourists remain stranded in a remote holiday village after avalanches hit China's northwestern Xinjiang region with metres-high snow and fickle weather impeding evacuation, state TV reported on Tuesday.

Road access to Hemu village, a scenic destination near the borders of Kazakhstan, Russia and Mongolia where the tourists were trapped, has been cut off by avalanches for several days now. The village is situated in Xinjiang's Altay Prefecture where continuous snowfall in some areas has lasted 10 days, it said.

The heavy snowfall triggered dozens of avalanches along large sections of highways in the Altay mountains leading to the Kanas scenic area, and some tourists were lifted by helicopter to safety, Chinese state media outlets reported over the weekend.

Snow brought by the avalanches reach as high as seven metres in some parts and in many, was higher than snow clearing equipment, CCTV said.

Work to clear the 50-km (31-mile) stretch of buried road started a week ago.

Complicating the rescue and snow removal work were rocks, debris and tree branches mixed in the snow, broken off as avalanches gushed down pine and birch forest slopes towards a river valley, rendering rotary snowplow vehicles useless. Rescuers have resorted to shovels and excavators.



Source: Tribune
 
2 weeks of winter storms kill dozens and cause cold chaos in parts of the US, but a thaw is coming

Two weeks of storms that have turned roads into icy death traps, frozen people to death from Oregon to Tennessee and caused power outages that could take weeks to fix continued to sock both coasts with another round of weather chaos on Friday.

The rain, snow, wind and bitterly cold temperatures have been blamed for at least 55 deaths in the U.S. over the past two weeks as a series of storms moved across the country. Schools and roads have closed, and air traffic has been snarled

There is hope. The forecast for next week calls for above average temperatures across almost the whole country, according to the National Weather Service.

Heavier-than-forecast snow fell in New York City, Baltimore and Washington, D.C., on Friday and Michigan City, Indiana, received 17 inches (43 centimeters) of lake-effect snow. But the biggest problems remained in places hit hard by storms earlier in the week.


 

China landslide kills eight, dozens missing​


BEIJING, Jan 22 (Reuters) - A landslide in China's Yunnan province killed eight people on Monday and dozens were missing as rescue operations continued in snowy, freezing temperatures.

At least 47 people from 18 households were missing, state-owned China Central Television (CCTV) reported. Eight of the missing people had been found dead on Monday afternoon, according to Zhaotong Daily, a local state-owned media outlet.

Another two people were hospitalized for injuries to the head and body, the national health commission said.

The landslide hit two villages in the southwestern city of Zhaotong at about 5:51 a.m. (2151 GMT), covering houses in brown mountain soil at the foot of a hill, state-owned China Central Television (CCTV) reported.

"The mountain just collapsed, dozens were buried," a man surnamed Gu, who witnessed the landslide, told the state-owned TV station for the neighbouring province of Guizhou. Gu said four of his relatives were buried under the rubble.

"They were all sleeping in their homes," he said.

Firefighters were climbing through the rubble searching for survivors in light snow, CCTV reported. It was not clear what had triggered the landslide.

China dispatched nearly 1,000 rescue workers to the scene, along with nearly 200 rescue vehicles, the report said. Chinese Vice Premier Zhang Guoqing was leading a workgroup to the site to guide rescue works.

More than 500 people have been evacuated from their homes.

Yunnan is among several provinces in the country's southern region currently experiencing bitterly cold temperatures, according to the National Meteorological Centre.

 

China landslide kills eight, dozens missing​


BEIJING, Jan 22 (Reuters) - A landslide in China's Yunnan province killed eight people on Monday and dozens were missing as rescue operations continued in snowy, freezing temperatures.

At least 47 people from 18 households were missing, state-owned China Central Television (CCTV) reported. Eight of the missing people had been found dead on Monday afternoon, according to Zhaotong Daily, a local state-owned media outlet.

Another two people were hospitalized for injuries to the head and body, the national health commission said.

The landslide hit two villages in the southwestern city of Zhaotong at about 5:51 a.m. (2151 GMT), covering houses in brown mountain soil at the foot of a hill, state-owned China Central Television (CCTV) reported.

"The mountain just collapsed, dozens were buried," a man surnamed Gu, who witnessed the landslide, told the state-owned TV station for the neighbouring province of Guizhou. Gu said four of his relatives were buried under the rubble.

"They were all sleeping in their homes," he said.

Firefighters were climbing through the rubble searching for survivors in light snow, CCTV reported. It was not clear what had triggered the landslide.

China dispatched nearly 1,000 rescue workers to the scene, along with nearly 200 rescue vehicles, the report said. Chinese Vice Premier Zhang Guoqing was leading a workgroup to the site to guide rescue works.

More than 500 people have been evacuated from their homes.

Yunnan is among several provinces in the country's southern region currently experiencing bitterly cold temperatures, according to the National Meteorological Centre.


Death toll in southwestern China landslide rises to 31 while more remain missing

Authorities raised the confirmed death toll to 31 on Tuesday in a landslide in a remote, mountainous part of China’s southwestern province of Yunnan, Chinese state media reported.

The disaster struck just before 6 a.m. on Monday in the village of Liangshui in the northeastern part of Yunnan.

Authorities said earlier Tuesday that a total of 44 people were either missing or had been found dead.

Search and rescue operations resumed after being suspended earlier in the day due to another landslide alert.More than 1,000 rescuers were working amid freezing temperatures, with the help of excavators, drones and rescue dogs, according to the Ministry of Emergency Management. Two survivors were found Monday and were recovering at a local hospital.

State news agency Xinhua, citing a preliminary investigation by local experts, said the landslide was triggered by the collapse of a steep clifftop area, with the collapsed mass measuring around 100 meters (330 feet) wide, 60 meters (200 feet) in height, and an average of 6 meters (20 feet) in thickness. It did not elaborate on what caused the initial collapse.

Aerial photos posted by Xinhua showed the side of a heavily terraced mountain had spilled over several village homes. More than 900 villagers were relocated.

Zhenxiong county lies about 2,250 kilometers (1,400 miles) southwest of Beijing, with altitudes ranging as high as 2,400 meters (7,900 feet).

Rescuers struggled with snow, icy roads and freezing temperatures that were forecast to persist for at least the next three days.

Heavy snow has been falling in many parts of China, causing transportation chaos and endangering lives.

Last week, rescuers evacuated tourists from a remote skiing area in northwestern China where dozens of avalanches triggered by heavy snow had trapped more than 1,000 people for a week. The avalanches blocked roads, stranding both tourists and residents in a village in Altay prefecture in the Xinjiang region, close to China’s border with Mongolia, Russia and Kazakhstan.

Landslides, often caused by rain or unsafe construction work, are not uncommon in China. At least 70 people were killed in landslides last year, including more than 50 at an open-pit mine in the Inner Mongolia region.

In all, natural disasters in China left 691 people dead and missing last year, causing direct economic losses of about 345 billion yuan ($48 billion, according to the National Commission for Disaster Reduction and the Ministry of Emergency Management. Meanwhile, the Ministry of Natural Resources implemented emergency response measures for geological disasters and sent a work team of experts to the site.

Also on Tuesday, a magnitude 7.1 earthquake struck a sparsely populated part of China’s western Xinjiang region, causing extensive damage but injuring just six people in freezing cold weather, authorities said. The tremors were felt hundreds of kilometers away. The quake was the latest in a series of seismic events and natural disasters to hit the country’s western regions.

Only last month, China’s deadliest earthquake in years struck the northwest in a remote region between Gansu and Qinghai provinces. At least 149 people were killed in the magnitude 6.2 temblor that struck on Dec. 18, reducing homes to rubble and triggering heavy mudslides that inundated two villages in Qinghai province. Nearly 1,000 people were injured and more than 14,000 homes were destroyed.

SOURCE: AP NEWS
 
Forest Fires Kill 51 in Chile, Menace Urban Areas

Forest fires raging in central Chile have killed at least 51 people and the death toll is likely to keep climbing, authorities said on Saturday, as emergency services battled to snuff out flames threatening urban areas.

Black smoke billowed into the sky over many parts of the Valparaiso region, home to nearly one million inhabitants in central Chile, while firefighters using helicopters and trucks struggled to quell the fires.

Areas around the coastal tourist city of Vina del Mar have been some of the hardest hit and rescue teams were struggling to reach all the affected areas, Chilean authorities said.


 
Mudslides, flooding and strong winds are battering southern California in a second day of storms drenches one of the most populous parts of the US.

Heavy rain of up to 1in (2.54cm) an hour is expected to hit areas around Los Angeles for at least 24 hours from Monday.

The "atmospheric rivers" causing the storms have already seen swathes of the state hit by rain, wind and snow.

A state of emergency has been declared in 10 of the state's counties.

Forecasters have said torrential rain is the main risk facing California on Monday.

On Sunday, the Weather Prediction Service (WPC), part of the National Weather Service (NWS), issued a level 4 warning for rainfall in southern California.

The WPC said potentially "life-threatening" and "catastrophic" flash flooding threatened the Los Angeles Basin and surrounding area. It said mudslides and debris flows were also a risk.

The centre added that "very heavy" snows were expected in the Sierra Nevada mountains, rendering travel "dangerous to impossible".

The NWS said strong winds of up to 70mph (112kmph) could cause further power cuts and downed trees, though winds would decrease significantly by Monday night.

Large steep waves would make areas along the coastline "extremely dangerous," it added.

On Sunday, flights from Santa Barbara Airport were cancelled and drivers stranded by flooding in Los Angeles had to be released by rescuers.

Hundreds of thousands were without power as the storm knocked out electricity networks.

Officials in Orange County issued a voluntary evacuation warning for some areas, but said that the warning could become an order with "little or no notice".

The storm is due to an "atmospheric river" effect, caused by airborne currents of dense moisture.

Atmospheric rivers are a phenomenon in which water evaporates into the air and is carried along by the wind, forming long currents that flow in the sky like rivers flow on land.

A first atmospheric river hit California last week. The renewed bout of bad weather is caused by a second.

In a statement declaring the state of emergency in eight counties, including Los Angeles and Orange, Governor Gavin Newsom said: "This is a serious storm with dangerous and potentially life-threatening impacts.

"California is ready with a record number of emergency assets on the ground to respond to the impacts of this storm."

Two other states have declared their own states of emergency.

The NWS said Monday would be "one of the most dramatic weather days in recent memory".

NWS officials urged people in affected areas to heed evacuation orders, stay off the roads and be prepared for potential power cuts.

Source: BBC

 
Historic storm sends debris through LA’s Hollywood Hills, leaves 1.1 million without power

A storm of historic proportions dumped a record amount of rain over parts of Los Angeles on Monday, sending mud and boulders down hillsides dotted with multimillion-dollar homes while people living in homeless encampments in many parts of the city scrambled for safety.

More than one million people statewide were without power.

The storm was the second one fueled by an atmospheric river to hit the state over the span of days.

About 2.5 million people in the Los Angeles area, including the Hollywood Hills and Beverly Hills, were under a flash flood warning. Up to 9 inches (23 centimeters) of rain had already fallen in the area, with more expected, according to the National Weather Service, which called the flash flooding and threat of mudslides “a particularly dangerous situation.”


 
Los Angeles hit by 475 mudslides as atmospheric river storm brings more rain

Los Angeles has recorded at least 475 mudslides after one of the wettest storms in the history of southern California.

Officials are warning of further mudslides and flooding after a large amount of the city's average annual rainfall fell in just three days - while seven deaths have been reported across the state.

LA mayor Karen Bass said: "Our hillsides are already saturated. So even not very heavy rains could still lead to additional mudslides.

"Even when the rain stops, the ground may continue to shift."

Three were killed yesterday in the extreme conditions - and nearly 400 trees have fallen in the city.

Another died today in a swollen Tijuana River channel near the border with Mexico.

LA fire chief Kristin Crowley said at least three dozen buildings required inspection because of mudslide damage and hillside slope failures - and seven had been marked unsafe.

In Los Angeles, between six and 12 inches of rain fell, making it the third wettest two-day stretch since records began in the 1870s.

One city resident, Dion Peronneau, said her home was hit by a mudslide which knocked her sliding glass doors off their frame as it came pouring into her home of 25 years.


 
Philippine landslide death toll climbs to 37

The number of people killed by a landslide in the southern Philippines has risen to 37, an official said on Sunday, as rescue workers continued to dig through mud even as hope of finding more survivors dimmed.

The landslide struck on Tuesday night outside a gold mine in Maco town in the province of Davao de Oro, burying homes and vehicles ferrying employees to the site operated by Apex Mining

Edward Macapili, an official of Davao de Oro province, said 37 people had died from the landslide, in the latest update after two more bodies were found on Sunday.

However, the tally of missing people was revised down to 63 from 77, while there were 32 injured. Officials did not immediately cite a reason for the revision.

Macapili said over 300 people were involved in the rescue, but operations were being hampered by heavy rain, thick mud and the threat of further landslides. Rescue work resumed on Sunday morning, Macapili said.

Asked if there were still survivors, Macapili said it was already "unlikely", but the search would continue.

"The rescue team is doing its best, even if it's very difficult," Macapili said by phone.

Torrential rains have battered Davao de Oro in recent weeks, triggering floods and landslides.

SOURCE: https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/philippine-landslide-death-toll-climbs-35-2024-02-11/
 
Philippines landslide: Death toll rises to 68 in Davao de Oro

At least 68 people are now known to have died after a landslide swept through a goldmining village in the Philippines almost a week ago.

Officials say there are still 51 people missing following Tuesday's disaster in Davao de Oro province, but rescue workers admit there is little hope of finding any more survivors.

A three-year-old girl was the last person pulled alive from the mud.

Her rescue - after more than 60 hours buried - was described as "a miracle".

Edward Macapili, a disaster agency official of the Davao de Oro province, said at the time it have given "hope to the rescuers".

But on Monday, those hopes appeared to have faded.

"It is almost a week after the incident and... we are assuming that no one is alive there," Mr Macapili told AFP news agency. "There is already a foul smell in the area now so there's a need to fast-track the retrieval."

The landslide struck Tuesday night, destroying 55 homes and engulfing three buses and a jeepney - a type of minibus - waiting to pick up workers from the gold mine. Lea Anora, a unit member of the Management of the Dead and the Missing (MDM), told ABS-CBN News that the death toll so far included 42 residents and 26 mining employees.

More than 30 people were injured.

Landslides are a frequent hazard across much of the Philippines because of the mountainous terrain, heavy rainfall, and widespread deforestation from mining and illegal logging.

Heavy monsoon rains have pounded parts of Mindanao on and off for weeks, causing landslides and flooding that have forced tens of thousands of people into emergency shelters.

The area has also been hit by a series of earthquakes, including on Saturday when rescuers were forced to pause their operations due to a magnitude 5.9 earthquake.

 

Death toll rises to 25 in Nuristan avalanche triggered by heavy snow​

A devastating landslide triggered by heavy snowfall has struck the eastern Afghan province of Nuristan, resulting in a tragic loss of life and injuries. The disaster unfolded overnight on Sunday in the village of Nakre, nestled in the Tatin valley of Nuristan, as earth, snow, and rubble engulfed the area.

According to Janan Sayeq, a spokesperson for the disaster management ministry, the landslide has claimed the lives of 25 individuals and left eight others injured. However, the death toll is feared to rise as rescue operations continue amidst challenging conditions.

Nuristan province, characterized by its mountainous terrain and dense forests, lies adjacent to the Pakistan border and forms part of the southern fringe of the Hindu Kush mountain range. The treacherous landscape, compounded by heavy snowfall, has impeded rescue efforts, with snow blocking key access roads and hindering helicopter operations.

Mohammad Nabi Adel, the provincial head of public works, highlighted the difficulties faced by rescue teams due to adverse weather conditions. The ongoing snowfall has compounded the challenges, making it arduous to reach affected areas and provide assistance to those in need.

Jamiullah Hashimi, the provincial head of information and culture, reported significant damage to around 20 houses in the affected village. With rescue efforts underway amidst continuing snowfall, there are concerns that the number of casualties may escalate.

The recent arrival of snow, albeit delayed, has exacerbated the humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan, a country already grappling with the impacts of a prolonged drought and vulnerability to climate change. The scarcity of precipitation has adversely affected agriculture, forcing many farmers to postpone planting and exacerbating food insecurity.

The dire situation in Nuristan underscores the urgent need for disaster preparedness and mitigation measures, particularly in regions prone to natural disasters. International aid and support are crucial in addressing the immediate needs of the affected communities and assisting in long-term recovery efforts.

As Afghanistan faces the dual challenges of severe weather conditions and ongoing instability, efforts to mitigate the impacts of natural disasters and provide humanitarian assistance remain paramount. In the wake of this tragedy, the international community must rally together to support Afghanistan and its people during this difficult time.

Source: SAMAA
 
A huge fire broke out in a power distribution firm in Chhattisgarh's Raipur today, prompting the authorities to evacuate people from houses near the company.

Visuals from the site show police and firefighters trying to douse the blaze. Reports said no one was injured, news agency ANI reported.

 

Thousands evacuated as Orsk dam burst worsens Russia floods​

Thousands are being evacuated in a region of south-western Russia because of floods made worse by a dam burst in Orsk city, officials say.

Heavy earth-moving machinery is on site trying to shore up the dam.

Earlier, an emergency was declared across the entire Orenburg region after levels in the Ural River rose dangerously because of melting ice.

Officials say 10,000 residents may be in the flooding zone and up to 4,000 houses could be inundated.

"Work in the area of the dam rupture in Orsk continues," the Russian Emergencies Ministry said in a statement, adding that around 440 people and 217 pieces of equipment were involved in the effort.

Russian state media said more than 700 residents of two of the three districts of Orsk were being evacuated, as well as thousands more in the wider region.

"Citizens of the Leninsky and Sovetsky districts of Orsk are being evacuated to temporary accommodation centres," the regional prosecutor's office said in a message.

Three people were found dead following patrols in the flood zone, emergencies officials said, although their deaths are not thought to be directly related to the flooding.

Orsk Mayor Vasily Kozupitsa said the situation was "rapidly worsening", with half of the city's old town district flooded and the rest potentially soon to be cut off from the rest of the city.

Local emergency services said they were working to stem the flooding in Orsk, about 1,800km (1,100 miles) southeast of Moscow.

Orsk has a population of about 230,000. The evacuees are being moved to nearby schools.

Unverified footage on the Telegram messenger app appeared to show water gushing through a breach in an earthen dam.

The area - which includes Orsk and Orenburg, other Urals regions and parts of neighbouring Kazakhstan - has been hit by widespread flooding in recent days.

Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev said the floods may be the country's worst natural disaster for 80 years.

Source: BBC
 

Russia Kazakhstan floods: High water levels swamp Orenburg houses​


Floods in the Russian city of Orenburg have raised water levels to two meters above critical, leaving just the roofs of some houses showing.

Levels in Orenburg are likely to peak on Friday, but floods are expected to spread through neighboring regions over the coming days and weeks.

Kazakhstan has also been badly affected, with 100,000 people evacuated from their homes in the last week.

The flooding is being described as the worst to hit the region in 80 years.

Last week, several rivers - including the Ural, Europe's third-largest - burst their banks. A number flow back and forth between Russia and Kazakhstan.

High seasonal temperatures have led to rapidly melting snow and ice, compounded by heavy rains.

The Ural river reached 11.29m (37ft) in Orenburg on Friday. Authorities say that more than 10,000 people have been evacuated there, and 11,700 homes have been flooded.

Mayor Sergei Salmin has called for further mass evacuations.

"The situation is critical, don't waste time!" he said on his Telegram channel.

The city has a population of half a million and is about 1,500km (930 miles) south-east of Moscow.

Water levels have fallen in Orsk, further east and upstream of Orenburg. Orsk was badly affected last weekend after a dam burst and saw rare public protests against low compensation offers and perceived failures by local authorities to save the dam.

From Orenburg the Ural flows through northwest Kazakhstan and into the Caspian Sea.

The Ishim and Tobol rivers are also reaching dangerous levels, and are only predicted to peak around 23-24 April.

Floodwaters are threatening a whole swathe of northern Kazakhstan and many dams and reservoirs there are filled to capacity.

In Petropavl on the Ishim river, in North Kazakhstan region, a local reservoir was threatening to overflow, potentially flooding a major road between two Russian cities - Chelyabinsk and Novosibirsk.

Meanwhile the Russian village of Kaminskoye has been evacuated after levels in the Tobol rose 1.4m overnight, regional governor Vadim Shumkov said.

Kurgan, the regional capital and city of 300,000, lies downstream and is also thought to be at risk.

Mr Shumkov said a dam near the city was being reinforced.

States of emergency have been declared in Kurgan region and in neighbouring Tyumen, in western Siberia.

Flooding often happens in this part of the Eurasian landmass when winter transitions to spring, but there has been nothing on this scale in living memory.

 
Russia Kazakhstan floods: High water levels swamp Orenburg houses

Floods in the Russian city of Orenburg have raised water levels to two metres above critical, leaving just the roofs of some houses showing.

The city's mayor urged many residents to leave home, as sirens sounded.

Levels in Orenburg are likely to peak on Friday, but floods are expected to spread through neighbouring regions over the coming days and weeks.

Kazakhstan has also been badly affected, with 100,000 people evacuated from their homes in the last week.

The flooding is being described as the worst to hit the region in 80 years.

Last week, several rivers - including the Ural, Europe's third-largest - burst their banks. A number flow back and forth between Russia and Kazakhstan.

High seasonal temperatures have led to rapidly melting snow and ice, compounded by heavy rains.

The Ural river reached 11.43m (37ft) in Orenburg on Friday. Authorities say that more than 10,000 people have been evacuated there, and 11,700 homes have been flooded.

Mayor Sergei Salmin has called for further mass evacuations in some districts.

"Leave your homes immediately. The situation is critical, don't waste time!" he said on his Telegram channel, adding that the sirens being heard in the city were not an exercise.


BBC
 
Heavy rain and flash floods kill 33 in Afghanistan

At least 33 people have been killed over three days of heavy rains and flash flooding in Afghanistan, the government's disaster management department said Sunday.

"From Friday onward, because of the rains there were flash floods which caused high human and financial losses," department spokesman Janan Sayeq said.

"The primary information shows that, unfortunately, in the floods, 33 people were martyred and 27 people got injured."

Most casualties were from roof collapses while some 600 houses were damaged or destroyed, nearly 600 kilometres (370 miles) of road demolished, and around 2,000 acres of farmland "flooded away", Sayeq said.

Some 20 of the nation's 34 provinces were lashed by the heavy rains, which have followed an unusually dry winter season which has parched terrain and forced farmers to delay planting.


Tribune
 
41 people died in storm-related incidents across Pakistan since Friday

At least 41 people have died in storm-related incidents across Pakistan since Friday, including 28 killed by lightning, officials said on Monday.

Pakistan's National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) has warned of landslides and flash floods because more rain is expected in coming days.

Punjab, Pakistan's largest and most populous province, witnessed the highest death toll, with 21 people killed by lightning between Friday and Sunday.

"I have asked the NDMA to coordinate with the provinces... and for the NDMA to provide relief goods to areas where damages occurred," Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Monday.

People living in open, rural areas are more at risk of being struck by lightning during thunderstorms.

At least eight people were killed in Balochistan province, including seven struck by lightning, where 25 districts were battered by rain and some areas were flooded.

Schools in the province were ordered shut on Monday and Tuesday, delaying the return of students after Eid al-Fitr holidays at the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan.

Four people were killed in road accidents linked to flooded roads in southern Sindh province.

Another eight people were killed in the northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, including four children, when houses collapsed in the heavy downpours.

Pakistan People’s Party chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, speaking to local media, blamed climate change for the surge in lightning incidents.

Pakistan is increasingly vulnerable to unpredictable weather patterns, as well as often destructive monsoon rains that usually arrive in July.


 

Southern China storms kill four, force mass evacuations​

Four people are dead and 10 others missing following storms that battered southern China, state media said on Monday, with tens of thousands evacuated from areas hit by torrential downpours.

Heavy rain has descended upon the vast southern province of Guangdong in recent days, swelling rivers and raising fears of severe flooding that state media said could be of the sort only “seen around once a century”.

“Three deaths were reported in Zhaoqing City while the remaining one is a rescuer in Shaoguan City,” state news agency Xinhua reported, citing local authorities.

Ten others remain missing as search and rescue efforts in the area continue to be carried out, said Xinhua.

China is no stranger to extreme weather but recent years have seen the country hit by severe floods, grinding droughts and record heat.

More than 110,000 people have been relocated across Guangdong, according to Xinhua.

Of those, more than 45,000 were evacuated from the northern city of Qingyuan, which straddles the banks of the Bei River, a tributary in the wider Pearl River Delta, state media reported on Sunday.

Heavy rain is expected to continue on Monday, with meteorological authorities forecasting “thunderstorms and strong winds in Guangdong’s coastal waters” — a stretch of sea bordering major cities, including Hong Kong and Shenzhen.

 
Kenyan police say at least 40 people have died after a dam collapsed in the west of the country.

A wall of water from the Old Kijabe Dam - located in the Mai Mahiu area of the Great Rift Valley region - swept away homes and vehicles, police official Stephen Kirui told the Associated Press news agency.

"We have so far recovered 42 bodies, which include 17 minors, following the early morning incident where a dam burst its banks in Kijabe area and rescue and search operations are going on," he said.

It follows weeks of torrential downpours and flooding that has already killed nearly 100 people in Kenya - and destroyed roads and bridges.

More than 200,000 people across the country have been affected, with homes in flood-prone areas submerged and people seeking refuge in schools.

The ongoing floods have also postponed primary and secondary schools from reopening for a new term.

"The devastating effects of the rains in some of the schools is so severe that it will be imprudent to risk the lives of learners and staff before watertight measures are put in place to ensure adequate safety of all affected school communities," the education ministry said in a statement.

Kenya's international airport in the capital Nairobi was flooded on Saturday, forcing some flights to be diverted.

The country's meteorological department has warned of more rainfall.


SKY News
 
Kenya flood toll rises to 181 as homes and roads are destroyed

Floods and landslides across Kenya have killed 181 people since March, with hundreds of thousands forced to leave their homes, the government and Red Cross said on Wednesday, as dozens more were killed in neighbouring Tanzania and Burundi.

Torrential rain and floods have destroyed homes, roads, bridges and other infrastructure across the region. The death toll in Kenya exceeds that from floods triggered by the El Nino weather phenomenon late last year.

In the central Kenyan town of Mai Mahiu, where at least 48 died in flash floods on Monday, two bodies were recovered from the debris on Wednesday, Kenya Red Cross South Rift Regional Manager Felix Maiyo said.

Military personnel accompanied by sniffer dogs had joined the search, Maiyo said. Earlier on Wednesday, government spokesperson Isaac Mwaura said the total death toll had risen by 10 to 179.

Last year's rains followed the worst drought in large parts of East Africa in decades.


Reuters
 

‘It’s going to be worse’: Brazil braces for more pain amid record flooding​

Overpowering floods and mudslides caused by torrential rains are continuing to sweep southern Brazil, killing at least 56 people and forcing tens of thousands out of their homes, the government said.

As well as raising the death toll on Saturday, the country’s civil defence agency said rising water levels in the state of Rio Grande do Sul were straining dams and threatening the metropolis of Porto Alegre.

Triggered by storms that began on Monday, the flooding is only expected to get worse, local authorities said, as rescuers scoured the ruins of washed-out homes, bridges, and roads for missing people.

“Forget everything you’ve seen, it’s going to be much worse in the metropolitan region,” Governor Eduardo Leite said on Friday as the state’s streets were submerged.

‘Nothing could be saved’
The flooding, Brazil’s worst in 80 years, has so far affected at least 265 municipalities in Rio Grande do Sul, according to the southernmost state’s civil defence department.

It has injured at least 74 people, displaced more than 24,000, and left 350,000 with some form of property damage.

“Nothing could be saved,” said Claudio Almiro, who lost his home and possessions to the flooding.

“Many people have even lost their lives. I raise my hand to heaven and thank God that I’m alive.”

Residents in several cities and towns have been left completely cut off from the world, with no electricity or telephone access, while others have been forced to abandon their livestock.

“You don’t know if the water will continue to rise or what will happen to the animals, they may soon drown,” said Raul Metzel, from Capela de Santana, north of the state’s capital.

 

‘It’s going to be worse’: Brazil braces for more pain amid record flooding​

Overpowering floods and mudslides caused by torrential rains are continuing to sweep southern Brazil, killing at least 56 people and forcing tens of thousands out of their homes, the government said.

As well as raising the death toll on Saturday, the country’s civil defence agency said rising water levels in the state of Rio Grande do Sul were straining dams and threatening the metropolis of Porto Alegre.

Triggered by storms that began on Monday, the flooding is only expected to get worse, local authorities said, as rescuers scoured the ruins of washed-out homes, bridges, and roads for missing people.

“Forget everything you’ve seen, it’s going to be much worse in the metropolitan region,” Governor Eduardo Leite said on Friday as the state’s streets were submerged.

‘Nothing could be saved’
The flooding, Brazil’s worst in 80 years, has so far affected at least 265 municipalities in Rio Grande do Sul, according to the southernmost state’s civil defence department.

It has injured at least 74 people, displaced more than 24,000, and left 350,000 with some form of property damage.

“Nothing could be saved,” said Claudio Almiro, who lost his home and possessions to the flooding.

“Many people have even lost their lives. I raise my hand to heaven and thank God that I’m alive.”

Residents in several cities and towns have been left completely cut off from the world, with no electricity or telephone access, while others have been forced to abandon their livestock.

“You don’t know if the water will continue to rise or what will happen to the animals, they may soon drown,” said Raul Metzel, from Capela de Santana, north of the state’s capital.


The death toll from a series of catastrophic floods in the southern Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul has risen to at least 83, the state’s civil defense unit said Monday.

Authorities are also investigating another four deaths to determine if they were related to the storms.

A further 276 people are reportedly injured and at least 111 people are missing, while at least 121,000 people have been displaced, according to the Civil Defense of Rio Grande do Sul.

The disaster has affected more than 850,000 people in 345 municipalities, destroying homes, roads and bridges.

CNN
 

Afghanistan floods kill at least 153, Taliban interior ministry says​

SHEIKH JALAL, Afghanistan, May 11 (Reuters) - The official death toll from devastating flash floods in northern Afghanistan has risen to 153 people across three provinces, the Taliban's interior ministry said on Saturday, while the World Food Progamme said it was double that.

The WFP, which operates throughout Afghanistan, said on X that floods had killed more than 300 people. It did not give a source for its figure.

When asked about the WFP figure, a ministry spokesperson said its figure was still 153 - but the authorities have said the death toll could rise.

At least 138 people have also been injured in the flooding across northern Baghlan, Takhar and Badakhshan, caused by heavy rains on Friday, the ministry spokesman, Abdul Mateen Qaniee, said.

In Karkar village in Baghlan province, residents held funerals for people who had been killed by the floods.

"I lost five members of my family - two sons, two daughters, and their mother in a result of this devastating flash flood," said Gulbudeen, a mourner who provided only one name.

"We were standing on the other side of the flood, but we could not help them, and eventually the flood took the lives of our loved ones."

Taliban authorities sent helicopters to try to assist civilians overnight after receiving reports that over 100 people were stranded.

Many people had been left homeless and transportation, water and waste systems were "severely disrupted", the World Health Organisation said.

"The impact has been profound, leading to loss of life and injuries, with many individuals still unaccounted for," the WHO's Afghanistan office said in a statement late on Friday.

It added that four health centres had been damaged and one destroyed by the floods and said the agency was sending health teams to provide treatment in the inundated areas.

Source: Reuters
 

Wildfire evacuation notice issued for major Canada oil town Fort McMurray​

TORONTO, May 11 (Reuters) - An evacuation alert has been issued for Fort McMurray, Alberta, as an out-of-control fire rages southwest of the major Canadian oil town, making it among the first actions ahead of the wildfire season.

In a notice late on Friday, the Alberta government said the wildfire danger is "extreme" in the Fort McMurray Forest Area and out of control at 1,000 hectares (2,471 acres) in size.

It said strong winds are expected on Saturday, as a cold front continues to pass over the region. Helicopter pilots using night vision equipment surveilled the wildfire area overnight.

In 2016, a huge wildfire in Fort McMurray forced the evacuation of 90,000 residents and shut in more than a million barrels per day of oil output.

Residents in Saprea Creek Estates are also placed on alert from the municipality of Wood Buffalo. In British Columbia, the Northern Rockies Regional Municipality issued an evacuation order for the town of Fort Nelson.

The federal government has warned Canada faces another "catastrophic" wildfire season as it forecasted higher-than-normal spring and summer temperatures across much of the country, boosted by El Nino weather conditions.

Meeting with fire chiefs in West Kelowna, one of several B.C. communities that were forced to evacuate thousands of people last summer, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Friday that it was likely to be "a very bad forest fire season."

"People are worried about what the summer might bring. People are worried what the future might hold," he said.
Last year Canada endured its worst-ever fire season, with more than 6,600 blazes burning 15 million hectares, an area roughly seven times the annual average. Eight firefighters died and 230,000 people were evacuated from their homes.

Source: Reuters
 

Persistent Brazil floods raise specter of climate migration​

MUCUM, Brazil, May 13 (Reuters) - Devastating and ongoing flooding in southern Brazil is forcing some of the half million displaced residents to consider uprooting their lives from inundated towns to rebuild on higher ground.

Two weeks after the onset of torrential rains, the Guaiba River running by state capital Porto Alegre is rising again, having passed the all-time high. In the state of Rio Grande do Sul, the streets of dozens of towns have turned into slow-moving rivers.

Just in the area around Porto Alegre, where four rivers converge to form the Guaiba River, researchers estimate nearly 3,800 square km (1,500 square miles) were flooded. That is more than the urban footprint of the Washington DC metro area, which includes 10 counties in two adjacent states.

With hundreds of thousands of families fleeing the floods, the disaster - which has killed at least 147 people, with 127 still missing - could touch off one of Brazil's biggest cases of climate migration in recent history.

Southern Brazil's location at the confluence of tropical and polar currents has fed periods of increasingly intense drought and rains due to climate change, according to scientists.

The record devastation in Rio Grande do Sul follows floods in the second half of last year, leading many of the 538,000 people now displaced from their homes to consider more extreme adaptations.

For the third time in seven months, businessman Cassiano Baldasso had to remove wheelbarrows of mud from his home in Muçum, a small town 150 km (90 miles) upriver from Porto Alegre, only to see the waters rise again. He says he has had enough.

"I have no idea where I'm going, but it will be somewhere far from the river, where our lives will not be at risk," Baldasso told Reuters as he removed another cart of mud from inside the house.

Mayor Mateus Trojan said many of Muçum's 5,000 residents will have to relocate. His office is planning to rebuild 40% of the town elsewhere.

Baldasso had already saved his family in September by climbing onto the roof of their two-story house until they were rescued by the fire brigade in the middle of the night.

During that flood, just a few blocks away, Maria Marlene Venancio's house was swept away and she lost everything. This month, the rented house she had moved to was flooded 1.5 meters (5 ft) deep. She fears it is time to leave Muçum.

"I think the town will become a river one day, and it will be difficult for us to live here. People with money are all leaving," she said.

Governor Eduardo Leite has said initial calculations show Rio Grande do Sul will need at least 19 billion reais ($3.7 billion) to rebuild from the disaster. The federal government has offered to freeze 11 billion reais of debt payments for three years.

On the streets of Muçum and other nearby towns, the slowly receding waters leave desolate scenes of furniture, clothing and appliances piled up in front of the houses.

Maria Ines Silverio has returned to her house, but she keeps her clothes in plastic bags for fear of the river rising again. She has a 30-year mortgage and says she cannot afford to leave.

"When we bought the house, this wasn't a flooded area. Now it is, and the river is going to rise more and more," she said.

Environmental experts warn that there is no alternative for some towns in the state but to relocate entire neighborhoods.

"We need to move urban infrastructure away from high-risk environments and return space to the rivers ... so they no longer impact cities with such magnitude," said ecologist Marcelo Dutra, professor at the Rio Grande Federal University.

"We can't oppose nature. We have to wake up to this force that is telling us we need to adapt and respect nature," he said.

Source: Reuters
 
Four deaths confirmed from severe storm that ravaged Houston

A severe storm packing hurricane-force winds pummeled Houston on Thursday, killing at least four people, blowing windows out of high-rise buildings and leaving some 800,000 homes without power as much of the city was plunged into darkness, the mayor said.

Much of downtown Houston and its commercial district were littered with fallen power lines and glass from shattered windows following the storm, with traffic and street lights knocked out across the city, the mayor, John Whitmire said in an interview on local television station KRIV.


 

Fifty dead in heavy rain, floods in central Afghanistan, official says​


KABUL (Reuters) - At least 50 people are dead following a fresh bout of heavy rain and flooding in central Afghanistan, an official said on Saturday.

Mawlawi Abdul Hai Zaeem, the head of the information department for the central Ghor province, told Reuters that there was no information about how many people were injured in the rain spell that began on Friday, which had also cut off many key roads to the area.

Zaeem added that 2,000 houses were completely destroyed, 4,000 partially damaged, and more than 2,000 shops were under water in the province's capital, Feroz-Koh.

Last week, flash floods caused by heavy rains devastated villages in northern Afghanistan, killing 315 people and injuring more than 1,600, authorities said on Sunday.

On Wednesday, a helicopter used by the Afghan air force crashed due to "technical issues" during attempts to recover the bodies of people who had fallen into a river in Ghor province, killing one and injuring 12 people, the country's defence ministry said.

Afghanistan is prone to natural disasters and the United Nations considers it one of countries most vulnerable to climate change.

It has battled a shortfall in aid after the Taliban took over as foreign forces withdrew from the country in 2021, since development aid that formed the backbone of government finances was slashed.

The shortfall has worsened in subsequent years as foreign governments grapple with competing global crises and growing condemnation of the Taliban's curbs on Afghan women.

 
Many feared dead in massive Papua New Guinea landslide

A massive landslide is feared to have killed many after it struck six remote villages in Papua New Guinea, local officials and aid agencies said.

The landslide buried more than 100 homes after it struck at around 03:00 local time Friday (17:00 GMT Thursday) in the highlands of Enga, north of the island nation in the south-west Pacific.

It was not immediately clear how many people were trapped in the rubble and no casualties have been officially confirmed.

Enga governor Peter Ipatas told AFP news agency it was an "unprecedented natural disaster".

Papua New Guinea's Prime Minister James Marape said his government has sent disaster officials to the landslide site to "start relief work, recovery of bodies, and reconstruction of infrastructure".

"I will release further information as I am fully briefed on the scale of destruction and loss of lives," Mr Marape said in a statement.

Images online show dozens of people climbing onto fallen boulders to survey the damage from the landslide. Many houses appeared to have collapsed and trees uprooted.

Rescuers are having a hard time sifting through the debris, reports say.

People can be heard crying and yelling on a video posted by Facebook user Kindupan Kambii from Kaokalam village in Enga.

"There are reports of deaths and multiple casualties, but the exact numbers haven't been confirmed yet," said a spokesman from Papua New Guinea's Red Cross Society.

He added that an emergency response team made up of officials from the provincial governor's office, police, defence forces, and local NGOs has deployed to the site.

International humanitarian organisation CARE told the BBC it is "currently undergoing a situation assessment" on the incident.

Enga is more than 600km by road from the country's capital, Port Moresby.

BBC
 
Over 100 feared dead in landslide in remote part of Papua New Guinea, with rescue efforts underway

Australia (AP) — More than 100 people are believed to have been killed in a landslide Friday that buried a village in a remote, mountainous part of Papua New Guinea, and an emergency response is underway, officials in the South Pacific island nation said.

The landslide struck Enga province, about 600 kilometers (370 miles) northwest of the capital, Port Moresby, at roughly 3 a.m., Australian Broadcasting Corp. reported. Residents from surrounding areas said boulders and trees from a collapsed mountainside buried parts of the community and left it isolated.

Residents said that estimates of the death toll were above 100, although authorities haven’t confirmed that figure. Some villagers and local media reports said the number of people killed might be much higher, though they did not cite sources.

The chief of the International Organization for Migration’s mission in Papua New Guinea, Serhan Aktoprak, said the landslide struck Yambali village, which is about two hours’ drive from Enga’s provincial capital of Wabag.


AP News
 
Race to rescue villagers trapped after landslide

Emergency services are racing to reach villages hit by a massive landslide in Papua New Guinea's isolated Enga province, where hundreds of people are feared to have died.

A rapid response team made up of medics and military personnel has managed to reach the isolated landslide site, humanitarian agency Care Australia said.

But difficult terrain and damage to main roads is making rescue efforts difficult, it added, with highway access blocked and the area only accessible via helicopter.

The landslide buried hundreds of homes in the highlands of Enga, in the north of the island nation in the south-west Pacific, at around 03:00 local time on Friday (17:00 GMT on Thursday).

It remains unclear how many people are trapped under the rubble.

"While the area is not densely populated, our concern is that the death toll could be disproportionately high," Care Australia said in an earlier statement.

Amos Akem, an Enga province MP, told the Guardian newspaper that based on reports from the ground, "the landslide buried more than 300 people and 1,182 houses".

Quoted by the Guardian newspaper, Mr Akem explained that rescue efforts have been hampered by a blocked road connecting the affected Yambali village and the capital.

Yambali is located some 50km (31 miles) from Wabag, the province's capital.

Speaking to AP news agency, UN official Serhan Aktoprak said the area affected by the landslide covered the size of three to four football fields.

Yambali village, he added, is home to 3,895 people.

Some houses in the village were spared by the landslide, Mr Aktoprak said, but "given the scale of the disaster" the death toll might be higher than 100.

The operation to reach those affected has been complicated by fears there could be more landslides.

"The land continues to slide and move, and that makes it dangerous for people to operate," Mr Aktoprak told AFP news agency.

Residents from surrounding areas have described how trees and debris from a collapsed mountainside buried parts of the community, leaving it isolated.

Footage from the scene shows locals pulling bodies from beneath rubble and trees as they traverse the terrain, covered by giant boulders and uprooted trees.

'No houses left'

A resident from a nearby village said that when he arrived at the scene of the landslide, "there was no houses
".

Speaking to Australian broadcaster ABC, Dominic Lau said it was all "just flat with soil".

"There was nothing, just rocks and soil... there were no people and there were no houses to see," Mr Lau added.

Enga's governor Peter Ipatas told AFP as many as "six villages" had been affected by the landslide, which he described as an "unprecedented natural disaster".

Enga is more than 600km by road from the country's capital, Port Moresby.

Papua New Guinea's Red Cross Society earlier said an emergency response team made up of officials from the provincial governor's office, police, defence forces, and local NGOs had been deployed to the site.

Speaking on Friday, Papua New Guinea's Prime Minister James Marape said authorities were responding to the disaster.

He said the government is working with local officials to provide "relief work, recovery of bodies, and reconstruction of infrastructure".

BBC​
 
UN fears 670 people buried under Papua landslide

About 670 people are estimated to be buried under a massive landslide in Papua New Guinea, a UN official says.

The head of the International Organization for Migration in Papua New Guinea, Serhan Aktoprak, said the impact of Friday's landslide in the country's isolated Enga province was greater than initially thought.

"There are an estimated 150-plus houses now buried," Mr Aktoprak said.

The affected areas are in the highlands of Enga, in the north of the island nation in the south-west Pacific.

Mr Aktoprak said rescuers were at risk because "the land still sliding".

"The water is running and this is creating a massive risk for everyone involved," he said.

BBC
 
Cyclone Remal kills 16, snaps power links to millions in India, Bangladesh

Strong gales and heavy rain brought by cyclone Remal lashed the coastlines of India and Bangladesh on Monday, with the storm killing at least 16 people and cutting electricity supply to millions before losing intensity.

The cyclone is the first this year of the frequent storms that have pounded the low-lying coasts of the South Asian neighbours in recent years, as climate change drives up surface temperatures at sea.

Packing speeds of up to 135 kph (84 mph), it crossed the area around Bangladesh’s southern port of Mongla and the adjoining Sagar Islands in India’s West Bengal late on Sunday, weather officials said, making landfall at about 9 p.m. (1530 GMT) before weakening on Monday morning.

The official death toll mounted in both countries as information arrived from coastal regions.

At least 10 people lost their lives in Bangladesh, disaster management chief Mijanur Rahman told Reuters, without providing details.

Two were killed as they headed to cyclone shelters, Rahman earlier said, adding that authorities will need more time to gauge the full extent of losses.

“People are usually very reluctant to leave their livestock and homes to go to cyclone shelters,” he said. “They wait until the last minute when it is often too late.”

In India’s West Bengal state, four people died due to electrocution, authorities said, taking the death toll in the state to six.

One person was crushed to death by falling concrete in the state capital of Kolkata, while a woman died when a mud home collapsed on the island of Mousuni in the Sundarbans delta.


AAJ News
 
UN fears 670 people buried under Papua landslide

About 670 people are estimated to be buried under a massive landslide in Papua New Guinea, a UN official says.

The head of the International Organization for Migration in Papua New Guinea, Serhan Aktoprak, said the impact of Friday's landslide in the country's isolated Enga province was greater than initially thought.

"There are an estimated 150-plus houses now buried," Mr Aktoprak said.

The affected areas are in the highlands of Enga, in the north of the island nation in the south-west Pacific.

Mr Aktoprak said rescuers were at risk because "the land still sliding".

"The water is running and this is creating a massive risk for everyone involved," he said.

BBC
The Papua New Guinea national disaster centre has said that Friday’s landslide in a remote village in the northern part of the country buried more than 2,000 people, and has formally asked for international help.

Unstable terrain, remote locations and damaged roads have been hampering relief efforts in the aftermath of the landslide, the United Nations said on Monday.

Source: The Guardian
 
Papua New Guinea orders thousands to evacuate from path of 'active' landslide

Thousands of residents were ordered to evacuate from the path of a still-active landslide in Papua New Guinea by the government on Tuesday, after parts of a mountain collapsed, burying an initial estimate of more than 2,000 people.

Relief teams in the Pacific nation have been trickling into the difficult-to-access northern Enga region since Friday though officials said the odds of finding survivors were slim.

Residents said they have been using shovels and bare hands to search for survivors.

"The landslide area is very unstable. When we're up there, we're regularly hearing big explosions where the mountain is, there is still rocks and debris coming down," Enga province disaster committee chairperson Sandis Tsaka told Reuters.

"The landslide is still active, as people are digging through the rocks, more is still coming down."

A state of emergency has been declared across the disaster zone and a neighbouring area, with a combined population of between 4,500 to 8,000, although not all have been ordered to evacuate yet, Tsaka said.

Military personnel have set up checkpoints and are helping move residents to evacuation centres, he said.

Heavy equipment and aid has been slow to arrive because of the remote location, treacherous terrain and tribal unrest in the area forcing the military to escort the convoys of relief teams.

More than 2,000 people were buried in the landslide which occurred early Friday, according to the government.

That is sharply higher than the initial estimates by the U.N., which has put the possible deaths at more than 670.

Former head of the local government Jiman Yandam estimated the dead at 162. Only five bodies have been recovered so far.

The variance in the total number of possible deaths reflects the difficulty in getting an accurate population estimate. The mountainous nation's last credible census was in 2000 and a 2022 voter roll doesn't include those under 18.

Tsaka declined to specify the total death toll saying he was not sure how many residents were in the area when the landslide occurred.

"From preliminary estimates, we expect it to be a significant number, in the hundreds and it could go beyond but at this point we'd like to be careful with the number," he said.

REUTERS
 

Germany's deadly floods spread along Danube​

Flood waters are continuing to rise in parts of southern Germany, and are now spreading down the Danube to Austria and Hungary.

Five people are now known to have died since heavy rain led to rivers bursting their banks in Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg.

One of the victims was a woman who died when her car left the road and became submerged west of Munich. A Bavarian firefighter is missing.

Although the Germand DWD weather service has declared an end to the torrential rain that has hit southern Germany for days, water levels in the historic city of Passau, where three rivers meet, have now risen close to 10m (32ft), the highest for more than a decade.

River levels on the Danube have also been rising in Austria and Hungary.

The Danube burst its banks in Austria's third-largest city Linz leaving areas close to the river banks submerged.

Local resident Gertrude told the Kurier website that the flooding brought back bad memories from August 2002 when a fifth of the city was left underwater.

The river reached 6.86m on Tuesday morning and was expected to peak during the afternoon.

Source: BBC
 
California wildfire in Los Angeles county forces evacuation of 1,200 people as it burns through 4,400 acres of land

Dramatic pictures have emerged showing firefighters trying to extinguish a massive blaze in Los Angeles, California, which has already forced the evacuation of 1,200 people.

The blaze, named the Post Fire, has burnt through 4,400 acres near the Interstate 5 Freeway Gorman, which is about 62 miles northwest of Los Angeles, according to an update by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, known as Cal Fire.


SKY News
 

Heavy rains trigger floods and landslides in Switzerland​

ZURICH, June 22 (Reuters) - Emergency services with helicopters, drones and rescue dogs searched on Saturday for three people who were missing after violent downpours caused floods and landslides in southwestern Switzerland.

MeteoSchweiz, the government's office for weather and climate, said 124 mm (4.88 inches) of rain fell in Mesolcina valley in the canton of Grisons on Friday, with 63 mm (2.48 inches) falling in a one-hour period.

"It was not the level of rain, but the concentration of rain in such a short period of time which caused the problems," a spokesman for MeteoSchweiz said.

"This concentration of rain happens only once every 30 years."

Several rivers burst their banks in Mesolcina valley, also known as Misox, covering roads, fields and villages with rubble, earth and wood.

Three houses and three cars were swept away by water in the village of Sorte, Grisons police said. Two police officers were able to escape from their vehicle which was submerged up to its roof.

Four people were initially reported missing, although a woman was later found under rubble and taken to hospital in nearby Lugano. A search was still underway for three other people who police said could have been in their homes when the flooding took place.

Police urged people not to travel to the region as many roads were closed. Five villages were without electricity.

In the western canton of Valais, 230 people were evacuated since Friday after heavy rainfall caused flooding and mudslides.

The road and railway line to the town of Zermatt, next to the Matterhorn mountain, was also closed, although police said they hoped to reopen the routes on Saturday evening.

Source: Reuters
 
Canada Prisoners Relocated As Hundreds Flee Wildfires

Wildfires in eastern Canada forced the evacuation of hundreds of people -- including 225 inmates from a maximum security prison, officials said Sunday.

The federal penitentiary in Port-Cartier, about 500 kilometers (300 miles) north of Quebec City, was ordered evacuated along with about 1,000 local residents over the weekend, and 750 workers at a hydroelectric dam in Labrador further north.

In a statement, correctional services commissioner Anne Kelly said the prison was closed and inmates "were successfully moved from the affected area to other secure federal correctional facilities."

The prison has housed some of the nation's most notorious criminals including several serial killers.

A local state of emergency was declared on Friday as wildfires menaced the town of Port-Cartier.

Hundreds of workers at the massive hydroelectric plant in Churchill Falls also remained displaced Sunday after fleeing advancing fires earlier this week.

The plant provides power to the province of Newfoundland, neighboring Quebec and other jurisdictions.

The fire "remains a threat to the community," Newfoundland Premier Andrew Furey told a news conference, but it has been "largely contained" to the opposite shores of a river from the plant.

Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro boss Jennifer Williams said a skeleton crew remained behind to keep the generating plant working.


 
Beryl makes landfall as Category 4 hurricane on island near Grenada

Hurricane Beryl, the first storm of the 2024 Atlantic season, has slammed into the Caribbean island of Carriacou, which is part of Grenada, as a powerful Category 4 storm, the National Hurricane Center says.

“The eye of #Beryl has made landfall on Carriacou Island,” the NHC wrote on X on Monday, warning residents in a separate bulletin of “life-threatening conditions” and that “winds will rapidly increase within the eyewall”.

Carriacou is one of the islands of Grenada, where officials said winds increased up to 240kmph (150mph), blowing off roofs and causing other damage.

Hurricane warnings were in effect for Barbados, Grenada, Tobago, and St Vincent and the Grenadines as thousands of people hunkered down in homes and shelters.

The last strong hurricane to hit the southeast Caribbean was Hurricane Ivan 20 years ago, which killed dozens of people in Grenada.


 
Dozens killed in Ethiopia landslides

At least 50 people have been killed in landslides in southern Ethiopia, according to local officials.

Two incidents are thought to have occurred on Sunday evening and Monday morning, after heavy rains in a remote mountainous area of the Gofa zone.

The local authority said the search for survivors was "continuing vigorously" but that the "death toll could yet increase".

Footage showed hundreds of people gathered at the scene and others digging in the dirt in search of people trapped underneath.

In the background, a hillside can be seen partially collapsed and a large patch of red earth has been exposed.

Meskir Mitku, the general administrator of the Gofa zone, said women, children, and police officers were among the casualties.

"There was a heavy rain yesterday (Sunday) night and some people died from a landslide," government spokesperson for the Gofa district in the South Ethiopia regional state, Kassahun Abayneh, said.

"In the morning (Monday), locals, including police, gathered at the site to save those who were affected by the first landslide. That is when the second landslide happened around 10:00 (07:00 GMT) today and those who gathered there died," he said in quotes cited by AFP news agency.

Gofa is part of the South Ethiopia regional state and is located around 320km (199 miles) southwest of the capital, Addis Ababa.

South Ethiopia is among the areas of the country that have been hit by particularly heavy rain and flooding in recent months, according to the UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

But instances of landslides and floods go back further. In May 2016, at least 50 people were killed in floods and landslides following heavy rain across the south of the country.

Many factors contribute to flooding, but a warming atmosphere caused by climate change makes extreme rainfall more likely.

The world has already warmed by about 1.2C since the industrial era began and temperatures will keep rising unless governments around the world make steep cuts to emissions.

BBC
 
California's largest wildfire spreading rapidly threatening thousands of homes

A massive wildfire in California is spreading rapidly at a rate of eight square miles an hour, threatening thousands of homes and forcing people to flee.

More than 130 homes have already been destroyed by the Park Fire, the state's largest wildfire of the year so far, which covered 480sq miles (1,243sq km) on Friday evening.

It started in Butte County on Wednesday and has been moving quickly north and eastwards since then.

Although no one is yet reported to have died, the dramatic spread of the blaze has seen firefighters draw comparisons to the Camp Fire of 2018 that killed 85 people and destroyed 11,000 homes in nearby Paradise.


 
Twenty-four dead, dozens trapped in India landslides

At least 24 people have been killed and dozens are feared trapped after heavy rains triggered massive landslides in the southern Indian state of Kerala.

The landslides struck hilly areas in Wayanad district in the early hours of Tuesday.

Rescue operations are under way, but are being hindered by heavy rains and the collapse of a crucial bridge.

"We will be able to assess the extent of the damage only after a few hours," state minister AK Saseendran told BBC Hindi.

Mr Saseendran said local hospitals were treating at least 66 injured people, adding hospital staff were among those missing in the landslide.

Wayanad, a hilly district which is part of the Western Ghats mountain range, is prone to landslides during the monsoon season.

Landslides have hit several areas in the district, including Mundakkai, Attamala, Choorallmala and Kunhome.

A bridge connecting Choorallmala to Mundakkai and Attamala has collapsed, isolating the two places and making it difficult for rescue personnel to reach trapped families.

State and national disaster relief teams are conducting rescue operations. Several locals too have been helping out.

Mr Saseendran also said the army and air force have been asked to airlift trapped families and to erect a temporary bridge.

Wayanad district and neighbouring areas are on alert due to the forecast of heavy rains.

Schools and colleges have been closed in 10 of 14 districts in the state.

In 2019, 17 people had died after a landslide hit Puthumala in Wayanad, around 10km from the areas currently affected.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi posted on X (formerly Twitter) that he has spoken to Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan and assured the federal government's help in relief efforts.

Mr Modi also announced compensation of 200,000 rupees ($2,388; £1,857) to the victims' families and 50,000 rupees to the injured.

BBC
 
Twenty-four dead, dozens trapped in India landslides

At least 24 people have been killed and dozens are feared trapped after heavy rains triggered massive landslides in the southern Indian state of Kerala.

The landslides struck hilly areas in Wayanad district in the early hours of Tuesday.

Rescue operations are under way, but are being hindered by heavy rains and the collapse of a crucial bridge.

"We will be able to assess the extent of the damage only after a few hours," state minister AK Saseendran told BBC Hindi.

Mr Saseendran said local hospitals were treating at least 66 injured people, adding hospital staff were among those missing in the landslide.

Wayanad, a hilly district which is part of the Western Ghats mountain range, is prone to landslides during the monsoon season.

Landslides have hit several areas in the district, including Mundakkai, Attamala, Choorallmala and Kunhome.

A bridge connecting Choorallmala to Mundakkai and Attamala has collapsed, isolating the two places and making it difficult for rescue personnel to reach trapped families.

State and national disaster relief teams are conducting rescue operations. Several locals too have been helping out.

Mr Saseendran also said the army and air force have been asked to airlift trapped families and to erect a temporary bridge.

Wayanad district and neighbouring areas are on alert due to the forecast of heavy rains.

Schools and colleges have been closed in 10 of 14 districts in the state.

In 2019, 17 people had died after a landslide hit Puthumala in Wayanad, around 10km from the areas currently affected.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi posted on X (formerly Twitter) that he has spoken to Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan and assured the federal government's help in relief efforts.

Mr Modi also announced compensation of 200,000 rupees ($2,388; £1,857) to the victims' families and 50,000 rupees to the injured.

BBC

Scores missing as India landslides kill 158

The death toll from the massive landslides that have hit the southern Indian state of Kerala has now crossed 158, with officials saying 187 people are still missing.

Rescue operations, that had halted late Tuesday night, resumed on Wednesday morning.

The landslides are the worst disaster to hit the state since 2018, when floods killed more than 400 people.

The Indian flag is flying at half mast at government buildings in the state as it observed two days of official mourning.

The disaster, which took place in Wayanad district's Mundakkai and Chooralmala areas, "wiped out an entire area", Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan told a press conference on Tuesday.

The district and its neighbouring regions are on alert for heavy rain on Wednesday. Schools and colleges are closed in 12 of the state's 14 districts.

Joint rescue operations are being carried out by the army, navy and air force along with the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) and teams of police and fire department.

More than 3,000 people have been rescued and moved to 45 relief camps.

On Tuesday evening, air force helicopters conducted search and rescue operations to evacuate people stranded on Mundakkai, which was cut off by a river because of the disaster.

Officials said a small team of rescue workers had managed to cross the river and reach the area.

"Until 10 pm [16:30GMT] last night, we had rescued 70 people, after which we had to stop because of bad weather and rain," NDRF Commander Akhilesh Kumar told news agency ANI.

Rescue efforts have been hampered by heavy rains in the region.

In Chooralmala, the army said it had used ropes to cross the river, which is in spate, to assist and carry out rescue efforts.

Rescue teams plan to construct a temporary bridge across the river to reach people who are still stranded.

The landslides occurred around 02:00 India time on Tuesday [20:30 on Monday] in an area surrounded by tea and cardamom estates.

Mr Vijayan said the region was not known to be prone to landslides and sleeping villagers were caught off-guard, resulting in a high numbers of casualties.

Among those still missing are plantation workers and migrant labourers who lived here.

Rescue workers say they are looking under collapsed roofs and debris of destroyed houses for possible survivors.

A local man told news agency PTI that he saw mud-covered bodies in sitting positions on chairs and lying down on beds in one house.

Rahul Gandhi, leader of India's opposition in the parliament and a former MP from Wayanad district, said his plans to visit the disaster-hit region had been cancelled after authorities warned him that "incessant rains and adverse weather conditions" would make it difficult for him to travel.

His Congress party had on Tuesday raised the disaster in parliament.

BBC
 
Hopes for survivors fade in deadly India landslides

Hopes of finding more survivors are fading as rescue operations continue in Kerala, where massive landslides have killed 182 people, according to officials.

Nearly 200 people are still missing after Mundakkai and Chooralmala areas in Wayanad district were flattened by thick torrents of mud and water on Tuesday.

Rescue operations have been hampered by heavy rains in the region all week.

The army is constructing a temporary bridge to Mundakkai, which is across a swollen river, to help stranded residents and search for more survivors.

Health officials reported 256 autopsies, but that included a number of body parts.

On Thursday, Wayanad remained on high alert for more rains as schools and colleges were closed for the day.

The hilly district is known for its cardamom plantations and tea estates and has several popular tourist spots.

Officials said nearly 1,600 people had been rescued from the affected villages and tea estates. But migrant workers from the estates were among those still missing.

More than 8,000 people have been moved to 82 relief camps set up in the district, Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan has said.

The army is now building a temporary metal bridge to Mundakkai village, which is among the worst affected by the landslides.

Earlier, rescuers had constructed a temporary pedestrian bridge and used ropes to rappel across the river to reach stranded people there and move the injured to hospitals.

But heavy rains and strong river current had made it difficult to carry out full-fledged rescue work.

The temporary metal bridge is expected to be complete by Thursday evening. It will allow ambulances and heavy machinery to move rubble and search for survivors, Major General Vinod Mathew told reporters.

Meanwhile, the air force is conducting sorties to identify areas with survivors and distribute relief material.

Three army sniffer dogs were expected to reach the disaster zone to help detect people still trapped under the rubble.

"Still large areas are to be explored and searched to find out whether live people are there or not," senior police officer MR Ajith Kumar told AFP news agency on Wednesday.

TV footage showed harrowing scenes at relief camps and hospitals as survivors searched for their loved ones or waited for news of them.

One man listed out names of those who had still not been found as he told Manorama News, "My house was spared but I have lost many children who were like my own."

At a community centre that had bodies displayed for identification, a young man told The NewsMinute that he had identified two of his uncles, but was still searching for seven other relatives.

"I am in touch with people at other centres where bodies are placed and they are sending me pictures, but I am yet to identify any of my other missing relatives," he told the news site.

With more heavy rainfall forecast for the district, the government has warned residents to be prepared for flash floods.

BBC
 
Search for bodies after India landslide buried hundreds

Landslides that hit the southern Indian state of Kerala earlier this week have killed 196 people. More than 200 people are still missing and some 9,000 people have been moved to relief camps. BBC Tamil's Muralitharan Kasiviswanathan reports from the badly hit district of Wayanad.

"Have you seen this girl or her body?"

Clutching a mobile phone close to her heart, a woman goes from village to village, asking people the same question.

She shows two pictures of her niece Anita, who is missing.

In one, Anita is flashing the victory sign as she poses happily with her aunt. The nine-year-old moved to live with her after the death of her mother a few years ago.

The other photo shows a disfigured body on the ground.

The woman, who was too traumatised to disclose her name, said she received the picture on WhatsApp from some friends who thought it was Anita.

Since then, she has been trying to locate her niece, but hasn't been successful. She is not sure if Anita is dead or alive.

Her story resembles that of many others who are desperately searching for their loved ones.

Nearly 200 people are still missing after vast swathes of the area were flattened by thick torrents of mud and water on Tuesday.

The disaster stuck at 2am as most people slept, giving them little chance to escape.

Wayanad is known for its cardamom plantations and tea estates and has several popular tourist spots. Hundreds of plantation workers live here with their families in makeshift houses made of tin and clay.

On Thursday, rescue officials said that all the people trapped in tea plantations had been rescued and chances of finding more survivors were slim.

They added that rescuing people and retrieving bodies were proving to be difficult due to heavy rains that were continuing to lash the area.

Their operations were also affected because the bridge that connected the badly affected villages of Chooralmala and Mundakkai was washed off.

Officials have now constructed a temporary metal bridge to ferry equipment to the affected areas.

The BBC also witnessed scenes of chaos as anxious relatives waited outside a school where some of the unidentified bodies have been kept.

Amaravati, who narrowly survived the landslides, is still in shock. She is from the neighbouring Tamil Nadu state, but has been living in Chooralmala for years.

“It had been raining continuously for two days. When the first landslide struck, we went to our daughter's house, which was a short distance away," she said.

But when they got there, they saw "mud and debris everywhere".

The family fled to a nearby coffee plantation and took shelter there for the night.

But her husband’s brother and nephew were not as lucky. Landslides buried their house and Amaravati and her family are now trying to identify their bodies.

Ponnaiyan, who ran a tailoring shop in the area, said he and his family narrowly escaped death on the fateful night.

"But many of my neighbours, relatives and friends, who were sleeping peacefully in the night, have all died," he added.

When rains became too heavy, Ponnaiyan took his family to his shop thinking they would be safer there. But soon, an electric pole fell on the shop’s shutter and water started flooding in.

"When I opened the door, I saw water and mud washing away everything on the road. I thought we would die there,” he recalled.

After they had walked for about half-a-mile in knee-deep mud, the ground collapsed again. The family then climbed up on to a nearby mound, from where they were rescued by officials.

The next morning, he decided to go back and check on his friends and neighbours.

"But everything and everyone had been washed away," he said.

Almost everyone in the area had similar stories to tell. Many families have accepted that their missing loved ones are dead but some are still clinging on to hopes of a miracle.

BBC
 
Monsoon floods kill 12, swamp homes and crops

In most cities of the country, monsoon rains have inundated low-lying areas, causing floods in seasonal streams, destroying crops, and submerging hundreds of homes.

Over the past 24 hours, more than 12 people have lost their lives due to monsoon rains and the recent flood situation in Pakistan.

In Mianwali, heavy flooding in seasonal streams due to the rains have severely damaged crops.

In Rojhan, the flooding from the Zangi and Suri streams originating from the Sulaiman Mountains has reached nearby settlements, causing over 100 homes to be submerged. Residents have moved to safer locations on their own.

The rains have caused flooding in the Sindh River near Kandiya and a moderate-level flood at the Chashma Barrage.

In Sindh's Jamshoro, Khairpur Nathan, and Osta Muhammad, heavy rainfall has resulted in several incidents. In Jamshoro, the collapse of several house roofs due to rain resulted in the deaths of two people, including a woman.

In Naushahro Feroze, three incidents of roof collapses led to the death of a child and injuries to five others. In Jacobabad's village of Shah Dost, a house roof collapse during the rain resulted in the deaths of two people who were trapped under the debris.

Continuous rain in Dadu has caused flooding in seasonal streams, cutting off land connections between Dadu, Johi, and hundreds of villages in the Kachho area.

In Khyber Pakhtunkhwa's Karak district, a roof collapse killed two children and injured three people, including a woman.

In Karak district, four people, including two children, drowned in seasonal streams. The bodies of three have been recovered.

In Babal Khel, a grandfather and grandson drowned while crossing a seasonal stream, and a 26-year-old named Shehzad drowned in a seasonal stream in Lowagra Lagda.

In Tank, a house roof collapse due to rain resulted in the deaths of three women and a child, with two others injured.


Dunya News
 
Landslide at Uganda rubbish dump kills 17

At least 17 people are now known to have died after a landslide at a massive rubbish dump in the Ugandan capital, Kampala.

Rescuers are continuing to dig through the waste in the hope of finding more survivors after the landslide, which followed weeks of torrential rain.

The 36-acre (14-hectare) Kiteezi landfill is the only one serving the whole of Kampala, a city home to an estimated four million people.

Kampala Mayor Erias Lukwago told the AFP news agency it was "a disaster [that] was bound to happen", and that "many, many more could be still buried".


 
Landslide at Uganda rubbish dump kills 17

At least 17 people are now known to have died after a landslide at a massive rubbish dump in the Ugandan capital, Kampala.

Rescuers are continuing to dig through the waste in the hope of finding more survivors after the landslide, which followed weeks of torrential rain.

The 36-acre (14-hectare) Kiteezi landfill is the only one serving the whole of Kampala, a city home to an estimated four million people.

Kampala Mayor Erias Lukwago told the AFP news agency it was "a disaster [that] was bound to happen", and that "many, many more could be still buried".



Inna lillahi wa inna ilaihi rajiun.

People seem careless until something big happens.
 

7.0-magnitude earthquake triggers Russian volcano eruption and ash cloud warning for aircraft​


One of Russia's most active volcanoes has erupted, spewing massive plumes of ash into the atmosphere and putting aircraft on alert.

It was triggered by a powerful 7.0 magnitude earthquake off the east coast of Russia's Kamchatka peninsula on Sunday, according to the US Geological Survey (USGS).

The quake struck at a depth of 29km (18 miles) and there were reports of "severe shaking" and "moderate to heavy damage" in the nearest city of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, which has a population of more than 150,000 people.

According to the Kamchatka Volcanic Eruption Response Team (KVERT), aircraft have been issued a "red" code warning, the highest alert level, for a significant amount of ash in the atmosphere.

It describes explosions from the Shiveluch volcano, sending ash up 5km (3.1 miles) in the air, with the plume extending about 1,520km (944 miles) to the east-south-east.

Initially the USGS reported the magnitude as 7.2 but - as more data was analysed - the figure was revised downward.

Satellite images show two lava domes growing on the volcano's southwestern flank, according to the website volcanodiscovery.com.

Meanwhile, the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan (GSI) has issued a map showing the extent of the ash plume.

The Volcanic Ash Advisory Center (VAAC) in Tokyo is warning that "explosive activity" is continuing.

It describes a volcanic ash plume rising up to an estimated altitude of 28,000ft (8.5km) and moving at 60 knots (60mph) in an easterly direction.

Shiveluch has erupted around 60 times in the past 10,000 years, with the last major eruption in 2007.

It belongs to the Kliuchevskaya volcano group and is about 65,000 years old.

Catastrophic eruptions took place in 1854 and 1956, when a large part of the lava dome collapsed, creating a devastating debris avalanche.

Initially, a tsunami warning had been issued warning of "hazardous waves" possible for coastal areas within 186 miles (300km) of the epicentre, but the threat was quickly lifted.

 
Emergency declared after volcano erupts in Iceland

Police in Iceland have declared a state of emergency after a volcano erupted, forcing homes to be evacuated.

The eruption on the Reykjanes Peninsula, in southwest Iceland, is the sixth outbreak since December.

Iceland's meteorological office recorded increased seismic activity and earthquakes at the volcanic hill, Sundhnukar, days before the volcano erupted.

A large fissure has opened up nearby, at the Sundhnukagígar crater north of Grindavik, with lava flowing both east and west.

One estimate by the country's Met Office suggests "the lava flow has travelled about 1km in 10 minutes".

Experts also said the total length of the fissure was about 2.42 miles (3.9km) and had extended by 1 mile (1.5km) in about 40 minutes.

Recent studies showed magma accumulating underground, prompting warnings of new volcanic activity in the area south of Iceland's capital, Reykjavik.


 
Bangladesh floods leave 23 dead, 5.7 million people affected

The death toll from devastating floods caused by relentless monsoon rain and overflowing rivers in Bangladesh has risen to 23, with around 1.24 million families stranded across 11 districts, officials said on Monday.

As floodwaters recede slowly, many of the 5.7 million affected people remain isolated and in urgent need of food, clean water, medicine and dry clothes, above all in remote areas where blocked roads have hindered rescue and relief efforts.

The Bangladesh Meteorological Department said that flood conditions could persist if the monsoon rains continued, as water levels were receding very slowly.

Around 470,000 people have taken refuge in 3,500 shelters in the flood-hit districts, where around 650 medical teams are on the ground to provide treatment, with the army, air force, navy, and the South Asian country’s border guard assisting in rescue and relief operations, authorities said.

Vast areas of land are submerged, posing a significant threat to crops if the floodwaters linger for an extended period, agriculture ministry officials said.

An analysis in 2015 by the World Bank Institute estimated that 3.5 million people in Bangladesh, one of the world’s most climate-vulnerable countries, were at risk of annual river flooding. Scientists attribute the exacerbation of such catastrophic events to climate change.

“Countries like Bangladesh with negligible emissions and whose people have shown super resilience deserve immediate funds to address the impacts of climate change and frequent disasters,” said Farah Kabir, director of ActionAid Bangladesh.

“We need to recover from the losses and damage we have faced, as well as build resilience to future impacts and take on green development pathways.”

In one of the worst-hit districts, Noakhali, 56-year-old Shukuri Begum lost her home as it was swept into a pond by the floodwaters, according to ActionAid. Terrified, she fled with her grandchildren to a neighbour’s house, but couldn’t stay there long as it was no longer safe.

“I have a son with physical disabilities, and we couldn’t bring him with us. We had to stack beds and leave him on top, hoping he would be safe. I don’t know what’s waiting for us,” ActionAid quoted her as saying.


 
At least 31 killed in Iran after methane leak sparks coal mine blast

At least 31 people have been killed and 16 are injured after a methane leak sparked an explosion at a coal mine in eastern Iran, state media reports.

Another 17 miners are still unaccounted for after the explosion struck a mine in Tabas, some 335 miles southeast of the capital, Tehran, late on Saturday.

Local media had reported earlier in the day that 51 people were killed following the accident they said was caused
by a methane gas explosion in two blocks, B and C, of the privately-owned mine operated by the Madanjoo company.

The fate of those missing remained unknown as rescuers were still 400 metres away from their likely location.

They were expected to reach it by tomorrow after removing rubble and excess gas.

There were 69 people working in the mine at the time of the blast, Iranian state TV has reported.


SKY News
 
At least 33 dead as Helene cuts destructive path through southeastern US

Tropical Storm Helene brought life-threatening flooding to the Carolinas on Friday after leaving widespread destruction as a major hurricane in Florida and Georgia overnight that killed at least 33 people, swamped neighborhoods and left more than 4 million homes and businesses without power.

Helene hit Florida's Big Bend region as a powerful Category 4 hurricane on Thursday at 11:10 p.m. ET (0310 GMT on Friday) and left a chaotic landscape of overturned boats in harbors, felled trees, submerged cars and flooded streets.

Police and firefighters carried out thousands of water rescues throughout the affected states, including in Atlanta, where an apartment complex had to be evacuated due to flooding.

Helene came ashore in Florida with 140 mph (225 kph) winds, weakening to a tropical storm as it moved into Georgia early on Friday. As of early afternoon, the storm had been downgraded to a tropical depression and was packing maximum sustained winds of 35 mph (55 kph) as it slowed over Tennessee and Kentucky, the National Hurricane Center said.


 

Nepal closes schools after heavy rains kill 100​

KATHMANDU, Sept 29 (Reuters) - Nepal has shut schools for three days after landslides and floods triggered by two days of heavy rain across the Himalayan nation killed 100, with 67 missing, officials said on Sunday.

Flooding brought traffic and normal activity to a standstill in the Kathmandu valley, where 37 deaths were recorded in a region home to 4 million people and the capital.

Authorities said students and their parents faced difficulties as university and school buildings damaged by the rains needed repair.

"We have urged the concerned authorities to close schools in the affected areas for three days," Lakshmi Bhattarai, a spokesperson for the education ministry, told Reuters.

Some parts of the capital reported rain of up to 322.2 mm (12.7 inches), pushing the level of its main Bagmati river up 2.2 m (7 ft) past the danger mark, experts said.

But there were some signs of respite on Sunday morning, with the rains easing in many places, said Govinda Jha, a weather forecaster in the capital.

"There may be some isolated showers, but heavy rains are unlikely," he said.

Kathmandu weather officials blamed the heavy downpours on a low-pressure system in the Bay of Bengal extending over parts of neighbouring India close to Nepal.

Haphazard development amplifies climate change risks in Nepal, say climate scientists at the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD).

"I’ve never before seen flooding on this scale in Kathmandu," said Arun Bhakta Shrestha, an environmental risk official at the centre.

In a statement, it urged the government and city planners to "urgently" step up investment in, and plans for, infrastructure, such as underground stormwater and sewage systems, both of the "grey", or engineered kind, and "green", or nature-based type.

The impact of the rains was aggravated by poor drainage due to unplanned settlement and urbanisation efforts, construction on floodplains, lack of areas for water retention, and encroachment on the Bagmati river, it added.

Source: Reuters
 
At least 33 dead as Helene cuts destructive path through southeastern US

Tropical Storm Helene brought life-threatening flooding to the Carolinas on Friday after leaving widespread destruction as a major hurricane in Florida and Georgia overnight that killed at least 33 people, swamped neighborhoods and left more than 4 million homes and businesses without power.

Helene hit Florida's Big Bend region as a powerful Category 4 hurricane on Thursday at 11:10 p.m. ET (0310 GMT on Friday) and left a chaotic landscape of overturned boats in harbors, felled trees, submerged cars and flooded streets.

Police and firefighters carried out thousands of water rescues throughout the affected states, including in Atlanta, where an apartment complex had to be evacuated due to flooding.

Helene came ashore in Florida with 140 mph (225 kph) winds, weakening to a tropical storm as it moved into Georgia early on Friday. As of early afternoon, the storm had been downgraded to a tropical depression and was packing maximum sustained winds of 35 mph (55 kph) as it slowed over Tennessee and Kentucky, the National Hurricane Center said.


Deadly Helene floods spread to more US states​


Torrential rain from Storm Helene has ravaged parts of North Carolina and Tennessee - the latest south-eastern US states to suffer in a disaster that has killed at least 63 people.

In North Carolina the mountain city of Asheville was largely cut off by flooding on Saturday, the BBC's US partner CBS News reported.

More than 400 roads remain closed in the state, where 10 people have died. Supplies are being airlifted to residents, state Governor Roy Cooper said.

Officials have continued daring rescues with boats, helicopters and large vehicles to help those stranded in floodwaters - including about 50 workers and patients who crowded on the roof of a flooded Tennessee hospital.

Many petrol stations are closed in North Carolina with long queues of cars at those still open. Power cuts have hit at least three million customers across five states.

The storm began as a hurricane - the most powerful on record to hit Florida's Big Bend, and moved north into Georgia and the Carolinas after making landfall overnight on Thursday.

Although Helene has weakened significantly, forecasters warn that high winds, flooding and the threat of tornadoes could continue.

The damage is estimated at between $95bn and $110bn (£71bn-£82bn). Governor Cooper called it "one of the worst storms in modern history" to hit North Carolina.

Asheville, home to about 94,000 people and a popular tourism and arts hub, was swamped and eerily quiet on Saturday, CBS reported.

 

Hurricane Milton leaves four dead in eastern Florida​


At least four people have died, including one person in a mobile home community, after Hurricane Milton lashed the US state of Florida.

Officials from St Lucie County, on the east coast, said the deaths were the result of at least two tornadoes that hit the area before Milton itself arrived late on Wednesday.

More than three million homes and businesses across Florida have been left without power as a result of the storm, according to state Governor Ron DeSantis, and buildings including a top baseball stadium have been damaged.

Some areas on the west coast saw 18in (45cm) of rain. DeSantis said flooding remained possible in the coming days.

Nonetheless, what Florida experienced was "not the worst-case scenario", DeSantis said. He added that some 80,000 people stayed in shelters overnight.

Ahead of the hurricane's arrival, there were warnings that the Tampa Bay area, on the west coast, could experience record storm surges of about 10-15ft (3-4.5m).

In her own briefing on Thursday morning, Tampa Mayor Jane Castor voiced relief that her city had not seen the type of storm surge that was feared.

Elsewhere in the state, surges were still several feet high - meaning that a wall of seawater was driven onshore by hurricane-force winds.

Castor said the situation was "not over" in her densely populated city. "When high tide comes in, rivers are going to flood all over Hillsborough County, not just in the city of Tampa," Jane Castor said.

Castor and other officials have spent days urging people in Milton's path to flee their homes or risk death. Evacuations were ordered up and down the west coast as forecasters spoke of a once-in-1,000-year amount of rainfall for some areas.

Milton eventually made landfall as a category three storm on Wednesday evening local time, bringing 124mph (200km/h) winds. Earlier in its life, it was categorised more than once as a category five hurricane - which denotes the most powerful type of storm.

It was preceded by several tornadoes, which can sometimes accompany a hurricane.

Twelve of these tore through St Lucie County, police told a CBS-affiliated news station. "This is like nothing we've seen," a sheriff said.

The four deaths in the county included at least one at the Spanish Lakes Country Club Village near Fort Pierce.

In the west of the state, the water supply has been cut in coastal St Petersburg, after officials were forced to shut down the system due to hurricane damage.

Officials say the shutdown is expected to last "until the necessary repairs can be completed" and this can only be done when it is safe for crews to be outside.

Elsewhere in the city, parts of the roof of a Major League Baseball stadium belonging to the Tampa Bay Rays were ripped off.

Meanwhile, a crane crashed into the Tampa Bay Times newspaper building, but the publication itself wrote that nobody was inside at the time.

In Tampa itself, police said they had rescued 15 people - including some children - from a local house after a tree crashed onto it.

One of those who found themselves waiting for power to be restored was Chynna Perkins, who told the BBC she had chosen not to evacuate, partly out of fear that she and her husband would not find accommodation suitable for their two large dogs.

She said her anxiety was "through the roof" as the storm hit, but they weathered it.

As well as the 3.4 million knocked off the power grid in Florida, there were thousands of others in Georgia and nearby North Carolina, which experienced the outer edges of the storm.

The arrival of Milton comes two weeks after the south-eastern US was pummelled by Hurricane Helene, which killed more than 200 people and left many more missing. Clean-up operations are ongoing.

Hurricane Milton is now heading eastwards towards the Atlantic.

 
India evacuating more than a million people as Cyclone Dana nears

Authorities in India are evacuating nearly 1.5 million people from the path of an approaching cyclone in the eastern states of Odisha (formerly Orissa) and West Bengal.

Thousands of relief workers have been deployed to minimise damage from Cyclone Dana, which is expected to make landfall in the next 24 hours.

Transportation services have already been affected, with scores of trains and flights cancelled.

India's weather department has said a depression over the Bay of Bengal is expected to turn into a severe cyclonic storm by Thursday evening.

The storm is expected to hit the coastal areas with wind speeds of 100-120 km/h (62-74 mph).

On Wednesday, Odisha Chief Minister Mohan Charan Majhi said arrangements were in place to ensure the safety of residents in districts along the cyclone’s path.

State officials said they had prepared temporary relief camps with food, water and health facilities.

"We are fully prepared to deal with the storm. Don't panic, be safe and be careful," Majhi told the media.

Odisha is evacuating more than a million people from 14 districts, while West Bengal is evacuating over 300,000 people from coastal areas.

Officials from the two states and rescue teams are on alert. Schools in the coastal regions have been shut.

Flight operations from Bhubaneswar and Kolkata city airports have been suspended from Thursday evening to Friday morning and more than 200 trains have been cancelled as authorities brace for the storm.

Fishermen have been warned against venturing into the sea and contingency plans have been made for Paradip port in Odisha to ensure safety of the staff and people living nearby.

The weather department has said “heavy to very heavy” rainfall is expected along the coast for the next 24 hours.

Odisha and West Bengal experience severe storms and cyclones every year.

In 1999, more than 10,000 people were killed in a cyclone in Odisha.

Last year, at least 16 people lost their lives when a cyclone lashed India and Bangladesh.

BBC
 

Flash floods in Spain leave at least 62 dead and disrupt rail and road services​


Final death toll is not yet known after flash flooding in eastern and southern Spain left several people missing, and prompted a red alert for heavy rainfall with adverse weather expected to persist.

At least 62 people were reported dead by Spanish authorities on Wednesday after flash floods swept cars through village streets, closed roads and disrupted rail services in parts of eastern and southern Spain.

Torrential rain and hailstorms have caused flooding across multiple regions in the worst natural disaster to hit the country in recent decades.

Emergency services in the eastern Valencia region confirmed the death toll, with rescue efforts ongoing.

Valencia's regional president Carlos Mazón said it was "impossible" to provide an exact figure for the final death toll at this stage. He told a press conference on Wednesday morning that some people were still stranded in inaccessible locations.

The central government has launched a crisis committee, and more than 1,000 soldiers from Spain’s emergency response units have been deployed to the devastated areas.

Videos shared on social media and by Spanish broadcasters show floodwater rising into the lower levels of homes, and carrying cars through streets. Police and rescue services have used helicopters to lift people from their houses and cars.

 

Spain sends 500 more troops to Valencia as anger grows over lack of support​


A further 500 soldiers are being deployed to the Valencia region as residents criticise local authorities over their response to the catastrophic flooding there.

More than 200 people are known to have died, with most fatalities in and around Valencia, but the death toll is expected to rise further.

Heavy rains that began on Monday caused floods that have destroyed bridges and covered towns with mud, cutting off communities and leaving them without water, food or electricity.

Thousands of people have travelled to rural areas to help with clean-up efforts, but on Friday authorities announced that traffic in the region would be restricted over the weekend to ensure access for emergency workers.

Weather warnings that remain in force in north-eastern and southern Spain are due to last through Sunday, while another has been issued in the Balearic Islands for Saturday.

Around 1,700 soldiers are already working on search and rescue operations in the Valencia region, although hope of finding more survivors is dwindling.

Part of the focus is on pumping water out of underground tunnels and car parks, where it is feared people will have been trapped as water surged in.

Paco Polit, a journalist in Valencia, told the BBC the new troops will bring in much needed heavy machinery, bulldozers, trucks, and help to improve the speed and organisation of the rescue efforts.

Local authorities are facing criticism over the speed of the response and for a lack of warnings in advance of the flooding.

Amparo Andres, who has owned her shop in Valencia for 40 years, told the BBC that at one point the water in the building reached her neck and she believed she was going to die.

"At least I'm alive, but I've lost everything. My business, my home," she said.

"And the government isn't doing anything. Only the young people around are helping us."

After returning to his home, local resident Juan Pérez said: "All my life, my memories.

"My parents lived there. And now overnight, it's all gone."

The civil protection agency, overseen by the regional government, issued an emergency alert to the phones of people in and around the city of Valencia after 20:00 local time (19:00 GMT) on Tuesday, by which time the flood water was swiftly rising in many areas and in some cases already wreaking havoc.

Juan González, who lives in the town of Aldaia, said the area was prone to flash flooding.

“It's outrageous that our local government didn't do anything about it, knowing that this was coming," he said.

In the devastated town of Paiporta, where more than 60 deaths have so far been reported, residents have expressed their frustration that aid is coming in too slowly.

"There aren't enough firefighters, the shovels haven't arrived," Paco Clemente, a 33-year-old pharmacist, told the AFP news agency as he helped clear mud from a friend's house.

The federal government in Madrid is also facing criticism for not mobilising the army sooner than it did and for declining an offer from the French government to send 200 firefighters to help with search and rescue efforts.

Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has vowed to do whatever it takes to help those affected by the disaster.

The volunteer clean-up efforts in Valencia - organised largely by young people on social media - have seen columns of hundreds of people march to the areas most affected by the flooding.

On Friday, the local authorities said traffic would be limited in the Valencia metropolitan area between 00:00 local time on Saturday and 23:59 on Sunday.

Local head of infrastructure Martínez Mus said the move had been taken to ensure emergency services could use the roads freely and to guarantee the supply of water, energy, communications, and food distribution.

Dozens of people have been arrested for looting, with one Aldaia resident telling AFP he saw thieves grabbing items from an abandoned supermarket as "people are a bit desperate".

Areas across the south - including Huelva and Cartaya - have also been hit by heavy rains, while hundreds of families in the city of Jerez have had to be evacuated from their homes.

One of the reasons the flooding has been so severe is a lack of rainfall during the rest of the year, which left the ground in many areas in the east and south unable to absorb rainwater efficiently.

The region of Chiva near Valencia saw as much rainfall in one eight-hour period on Tuesday as it would normally see in an entire year, according to state meteorological agency Aemet.

The warming climate is also likely to have contributed to the severity of the floods.

In a preliminary report, World Weather Attribution (WWA), a group of international scientists who investigate global warming’s role in extreme weather, estimated that the rainfall was 12% heavier than it would otherwise have been, and that such weather even itself was twice as likely.

 
Thousands under evacuation near Los Angeles as wildfire torches homes

Over ten thousand people were ordered to evacuate communities northwest of Los Angeles as fierce seasonal winds drove a wildfire down tinder-dry hillsides into ranches and homes, authorities said.

Firefighters and police cleared residents from neighborhoods near Camarillo before homes were set ablaze by embers blown two miles (3.2 km) from the fire front, Ventura County fire department Captain Tony McHale said by phone from near the blaze.

"It's like trying to put out a blowtorch with a squirt gun," said McHale of the fire which began in a hillside canyon on Wednesday then tore west, driven by Santa Ana winds.

Fueled by abundant grass and scrub, with wind gusts up to 80 mph (130 kph), the blaze has burned over 14,500 acres (5,900 hectares), authorities said.

Climate scientists say warming temperatures have created wet winters that allow California's coastal chaparral - small trees, shrubs and bushes - to thrive. Record-high temperatures this summer have turned hillsides into unlit bonfires.


 
Bali flights cancelled due to dangerous volcanic ash

Several airlines have cancelled flights between Australia and Bali due to dangerous ash clouds from a volcano near the Indonesian holiday island.

Qantas, Jetstar and Virgin Australia advised passengers of the disruptions on Wednesday, saying the ash from Mount Lewotaobi Laki-laki made it unsafe to fly.

The volcano spewed a 9km (6.2 miles) ash column into the sky over the weekend, one week after a major eruption killed 10 people.

Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology has also warned that the volcanic ash might drift to parts of the country's north on Wednesday.

Jetstar said all flights to and from Bali until 12:00 Australian Eastern Daylight Time Thursday (04:00 GMT) have been cancelled. Virgin Australia cancelled all its flights to and from Bali on Wednesday.

Jetstar also said it would soon mount additional flights between Bali and Australia using its larger Boeing 787 aircraft to move more passengers.

Activities in Indonesia have also been affected by the volcanic ash.

A jazz festival in Labuan Bajo town, some 600km from Mount Lewotaobi Laki-laki, was postponed to next year due to safety concerns.

Indonesia sits on the Pacific “Ring of Fire”, an area of high seismic activity atop multiple tectonic plates, and has about 130 active volcanoes.

Past volcanic eruptions have disrupted aviation. In 2020, ash clouds from Mount Merapi shut an airport in the city of Solo.

BBC
 
Tsunami warning lifted after powerful earthquake off California coast

People in California were told to prepare for a tsunami after a 7.0 magnitude earthquake struck off the coast of northern California.

Around 4.7 million people were under the tsunami warning in the state which was lifted around an hour after it was put in place.

The quake struck around 39 miles southwest of Ferndale, near the Oregon border, at around 10:44am local time (6:44pm), according to the US Geological Survey (USGS).

The tsunami warning was in place for a large stretch of the California and Oregon coasts.

It was predicted by the National Weather Service that a wave could reach the San Francisco coastline as early as 12.10pm local time.


 
Close to 1,000 people feared dead after cyclone in French territory of Mayotte

Close to 1,000 people may have been killed after Cyclone Chido hit the French territory of Mayotte in the Indian Ocean, the island's top official has said.

Mayotte Prefect Francois-Xavier Bieuville told local TV station la 1ere: "I think there are some several hundred dead, maybe we'll get close to a thousand, even thousands... given the violence of this event."

He said it was currently "extremely difficult" to get an exact number.

Officials had confirmed at least 11 deaths in Mayotte earlier on Sunday but said that was expected to increase.

Cyclone Chido caused extensive damage on Saturday, with nearby islands of Comoros and Madagascar also affected as it blew through the southeastern Indian Ocean.


 
China earthquake: Scores dead as tremor strikes Tibet

At least 53 people have been confirmed dead and 62 are injured after a major earthquake struck China's mountainous Tibet region on Tuesday morning, Chinese state media reported.

The earthquake that hit Tibet's holy Shigatse city around 09:00 local time (01:00 GMT) had a magnitude of 7.1 and a depth of 10 kilometres (six miles), according to data from the US Geological Survey, which also showed a series of aftershocks in the area.

Tremors were also felt in neighbouring Nepal and parts of India.

Earthquakes are common in the region, which lies on a major geological fault line.

Shigatse is considered one of the holiest cities of Tibet. It is the traditional seat of the Panchen Lama, a key figure of Tibetan Buddhism whose spiritual authority is second only to the Dalai Lama.

Chinese state media reported the earthquake as having a slightly lesser magnitude of 6.8, causing "obvious" tremors and leading to the damage of over 1,000 houses.

Social media posts show collapsing buildings and there have been several strong aftershocks.

"After a major earthquake, there is always a gradual attenuation process," Jiang Haikun, a researcher at the China Earthquake Networks Center, told CCTV.

While another earthquake of around magnitude 5 may still occur, Jiang said, "the likelihood of a larger earthquake is low".

The Chinese air force has launched rescue efforts and drones to the affected area, which sits at the foot of Mount Everest and where temperatures are well below freezing.

Both power and water in the region have been cut off.

Chinese president Xi Jinping has also called for all-out search and rescue efforts to minimise casualties and resettle affected residents.

While tremors were felt in Nepal, no damage or casualties were reported, a local official in Nepal's Namche region, near Everest, told AFP.

Tibet's earthquake bureau told the BBC on Tuesday that they were unable to provide estimates on casualties as they were still verifying the numbers.

The region, which lies near a major fault line of the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates, is home to frequent seismic activity. In 2015, a 7.8 magnitude earthquake near Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal, killed nearly 9,000 people and injured over 20,000.

BBC
 
China earthquake: Scores dead as tremor strikes Tibet

At least 53 people have been confirmed dead and 62 are injured after a major earthquake struck China's mountainous Tibet region on Tuesday morning, Chinese state media reported.

The earthquake that hit Tibet's holy Shigatse city around 09:00 local time (01:00 GMT) had a magnitude of 7.1 and a depth of 10 kilometres (six miles), according to data from the US Geological Survey, which also showed a series of aftershocks in the area.

Tremors were also felt in neighbouring Nepal and parts of India.

Earthquakes are common in the region, which lies on a major geological fault line.

Shigatse is considered one of the holiest cities of Tibet. It is the traditional seat of the Panchen Lama, a key figure of Tibetan Buddhism whose spiritual authority is second only to the Dalai Lama.

Chinese state media reported the earthquake as having a slightly lesser magnitude of 6.8, causing "obvious" tremors and leading to the damage of over 1,000 houses.

Social media posts show collapsing buildings and there have been several strong aftershocks.

"After a major earthquake, there is always a gradual attenuation process," Jiang Haikun, a researcher at the China Earthquake Networks Center, told CCTV.

While another earthquake of around magnitude 5 may still occur, Jiang said, "the likelihood of a larger earthquake is low".

The Chinese air force has launched rescue efforts and drones to the affected area, which sits at the foot of Mount Everest and where temperatures are well below freezing.

Both power and water in the region have been cut off.

Chinese president Xi Jinping has also called for all-out search and rescue efforts to minimise casualties and resettle affected residents.

While tremors were felt in Nepal, no damage or casualties were reported, a local official in Nepal's Namche region, near Everest, told AFP.

Tibet's earthquake bureau told the BBC on Tuesday that they were unable to provide estimates on casualties as they were still verifying the numbers.

The region, which lies near a major fault line of the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates, is home to frequent seismic activity. In 2015, a 7.8 magnitude earthquake near Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal, killed nearly 9,000 people and injured over 20,000.

BBC

Search goes into night for survivors of Tibet quake

Rescuers searched into the night for survivors after a major earthquake killed at least 126 people and damaged more than 3,000 buildings in a remote part of the Chinese region of Tibet, near Everest.

Another 188 people were injured after the earthquake hit the foothills of the Himalayas at around 09:00 local time (01:00 GMT) on Tuesday, according to Chinese state media.

A large-scale rescue operation was launched, with survivors under additional pressure as temperatures were predicted to fall as low as -16C overnight.

Earthquakes are common in the region, which lies on a major geological fault line, but Tuesday's was one of China's deadliest in recent years.

The magnitude 7.1 quake, which struck at a depth of 10 km (six miles), according to data from the US Geological Survey, was also felt in Nepal and parts of India, which neighbour Tibet.

Videos published by China's state broadcaster CCTV showed destroyed houses and brought down buildings in Tibet's holy Shigatse city, with rescue workers wading through debris and handing out thick blankets to locals.

Temperatures in Tingri county, near the earthquake's epicentre in the northern foothills of the Himalayas, were already as low as -8C before night fell, according to the China Meteorological Administration.

Sangji Dangzhi - whose supermarket was damaged in the earthquake - said the destruction of homes had been extensive.

"Here the houses are made from dirt so when the earthquake came... lots of houses collapsed," the 34-year-old told news agency AFP by phone, adding that ambulances had been taking people to hospital through out the day.

State media said that, as of 19:00 local time, some 3,609 buildings had collapsed - potentially leaving thousands of people without shelter.

A hotel resident in Shigatse told Chinese media outlet Fengmian News he had been jolted awake by a wave of shaking. He said he had grabbed his socks and rushed out on to the street, where he saw helicopters circling above.

"It felt like even the bed was being lifted," he said, adding that he immediately knew it was an earthquake because Tibet recently experienced multiple smaller quakes.

Both power and water in the region - which cannot be freely travelled to by journalists - have been disrupted. There were more than 40 aftershocks in the first few hours following the quake.

Chinese state media reported the earthquake as having a slightly lesser magnitude of 6.8, causing "obvious" tremors.

Jiang Haikun, a researcher at the China Earthquake Networks Center, told CCTV that while another earthquake of around magnitude 5 might still occur, "the likelihood of a larger earthquake is low".

Sitting at the foot of Mount Everest, which separates Nepal and China, Tingri county is a popular base for climbers preparing to ascend the world's tallest peak.

Everest sightseeing tours in the area, originally scheduled for Tuesday morning, have been cancelled, a tourism staff member told local media, adding that the sightseeing area had been fully closed.

There were three visitors in the sightseeing area who had all been moved to an outdoor area for safety, they said.

Shigatse region, home to 800,000 people, is the traditional seat of the Panchen Lama, a key figure of Tibetan Buddhism whose spiritual authority is second only to the Dalai Lama.

The exiled spiritual leader said he had been deeply saddened by news of the quake.

"I offer my prayers for those who have lost their lives and extend my wishes for a swift recovery to all who have been injured," the Dalai Lama said in a statement.

The current Dalai Lama fled Tibet to India in 1959 after China annexed the region, and has since been seen as an alternative source of power for Tibetans who resent Beijing's control - which extends to local media and internet access. Many believe China will also choose its own Dalai Lama when the current one dies.

Tibetan Gedhun Choekyi Niyima who was identified as the reincarnated Panchen Lama was disappeared by China when he was six years old. China then chose its own Panchen Lama.

The Chinese air force has launched rescue efforts and sent drones to the affected area.

President Xi Jinping has also called for all-out search and rescue efforts to minimise casualties and resettle affected residents.

While strong tremors were felt in Nepal, no major damage or casualties were reported, an official from the National Emergency Operations Centre told BBC Newsday - only "minor damages and cracks on houses".

The region, which lies near a major fault line of the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates, is home to frequent seismic activity.

In 2015, a magnitude 7.8 earthquake near Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal, killed nearly 9,000 people and injured more than 20,000.

The tremors on Tuesday morning, which sent many Kathmandu residents running out of their houses, brought back memories of that deadly disaster.

"In 2015, when the earthquake hit, I could not even move," Manju Neupane, a shop owner in Kathmandu, told BBC Nepali. "Today the situation was not scary like that. But, I am scared that another major earthquake may hit us and we will be trapped between tall buildings."

BBC
 
Dramatic scenes as wildfires sweep through west LA

A wildfire that started in the Pacific Palisades area of Los Angeles on Tuesday morning has spread across the west of the city at an alarming rate throughout Tuesday and overnight.

High winds and very dry conditions further fuelled the flames, causing the blaze to rip through neighbourhoods at alarming speeds. The fires reportedly spread from a size of 10 acres to nearly 3,000 in a matter of hours.

Firefighters have been battling the flames throughout the night, as residents were forced to flee amid evacuation orders affecting tens of thousands of people.

Photographers have captured dramatic scenes across the west of the city as firefighters work to control the fires.


 
God’s strike is definite.

Om Shanti to this human. Only God knows what was his Karma that he went away in the most dramatic and soul shaking manner possible.
 
US tornadoes, wildfires and dust storms leave 37 dead and 'staggering' damage

At least 37 people have died after tornadoes ripped through a swathe of the US Midwest and South.

Missouri bore the brunt of the twisters, which began to spawn on Friday. At least 12 people died in that state.

Powerful winds in Texas and Kansas whipped up dust storms that resulted in vehicle pile-ups and a dozen deaths.

The extreme weather, covering an area of the country that is home to more than 100 million people, fanned nearly 150 wildfires in Oklahoma. Fatalities were also recorded in Arkansas, Alabama and Mississippi.


 
Six Russians dead, 39 tourists rescued after submarine sinks in Red Sea off Egypt

Six Russians died on Thursday and 39 foreign tourists were rescued when a viewing submarine sank off the Egyptian Red Sea resort of Hurghada, the local governor's office said on Facebook, adding that no passengers or crew were still missing.

The Red Sea Governorate said the submarine, named "Sindbad", had 50 people onboard: 45 tourists of different nationalities from Russia, India, Norway, and Sweden, and five Egyptian crew members.

"Most of those on board were rescued and taken to their hotels and hospitals in Hurghada," the Russian consulate in Hurghada said.

The submarine was equipped with large portholes to let passengers see the Red Sea's spectacular corals and marine life, and was able to descend to a depth of 25 metres, according to the company's website.

The pleasure craft was a far cry from the extreme adventure submersible that imploded thousands of metres below the Atlantic near the sunken Titanic in June 2023.

The Red Sea is a major hub for Egypt's crucial tourism industry, a pillar of the economy, in which Russian tourists play an increasing part. Egypt also attracts tourists with its great pyramids of Giza and cruises on the Nile in Luxor and Aswan.


 
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