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At least 101 dead, 64 missing in Nepal floods

Large parts of the eastern and central Himalayan country have been flooded since Friday. Rivers experienced flash floods, causing widespread damage and loss of life.

“The death toll is 101 and 64 people are missing this morning,” police spokesperson Dan Bahadur Karki told AFP on Sunday.

“It is likely that the toll will rise as our search and rescue mission progresses in the affected areas,” he added.

The previous police report on Saturday reported at least 59 dead and 44 missing.

More than 3,000 people were deployed to participate in rescue operations using helicopters, motor boats and inflatable boats.

The Kathmandu Valley recorded 240 millimeters of rain in 24 hours, between Friday and Saturday morning, the Nepalese meteorological agency told the Kathmandu Post newspaper.

This is the heaviest rainfall recorded in the Nepalese capital since at least 1970, according to this agency.

Faced with heavy rains, the authorities warned against flash floods in rivers.

Those in Kathmandu overflowed, flooding houses and vehicles near the banks.

Some survivors took refuge on the roofs of buildings, others fled, progressing with difficulty through the muddy water.

“It’s scary. I’ve never seen such devastation,” Mahamad Shabuddin, 34, owner of a motorcycle repair shop near the swollen Bagmati River, said on Saturday.

Across the country, nearly 3,300 people have been rescued by rescue teams since Friday.

The landslides blocked several highways linking the capital to the rest of the country, leaving hundreds of people in difficulty.

Domestic flights resumed on Sunday morning to and from Kathmandu, after being completely suspended since Friday evening due to the weather situation. More than 150 departures have been canceled.

Monsoons from June to September cause death and destruction across South Asia each year, but the number of deadly floods and landslides has increased in recent years.

Experts say climate change has worsened their frequency and intensity.

More than 260 people have died this year in Nepal in rain-related natural disasters.

In July, a landslide on a road in Chitwan district (center) threw two buses with 59 passengers on board into a river. Three people were able to escape alive, but the authorities were only able to recover 20 bodies, a flood hampering the search.

str/gle/cco/tmt

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