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Avalanche kills four soldiers in Indian Kashmir
by Staff Writers
Srinagar, India (AFP) April 4, 2015


Ten killed in Tajikistan mudslide
Dushanbe, Tajikistan (AFP) April 3, 2015 - Ten people were killed by a mudslide in Tajikistan on Friday while working on an irrigation project in the mountains outside the capital Dushanbe, authorities said.

"At noon on Friday they were laying an irrigation pipe when they were struck by wet rockfall during their work," Orif Nozimov, spokesman for Tajikistan's state emergencies committee, told AFP.

All of the victims were men between 20 and 30 years old, Nozimov said, noting that only two of the bodies were recovered by a rescue team.

Avalanches and mudslides are common in mountainous Tajikistan. In February, a single avalanche claimed six lives in the east of the Central Asian country.

In 2014, authorities recorded around 40 deaths related to natural disasters, mostly mudslides and avalanches.

Tajikistan's neighbour to the south, Afghanistan, has suffered its worst avalanche season in recent memory, with more than 200 deaths this past winter.

An avalanche triggered by heavy snowfall killed four soldiers in the Ladakh region of Indian Kashmir near the border with China, the Indian army said Saturday.

The soldiers were travelling in a convoy of three army vehicles which was struck by an avalanche on Friday, the army's northern command spokesman, S. D. Goswami told AFP.

The avalanche hit at 5,600 metres (18,400 feet) near Changla Pass, about 500 kilometres (150 miles) east of the region's main city of Srinagar.

"The bodies of three soldiers were recovered. Another is presumed to be dead and a search operation is on to find him," Goswami said.

Indian Kashmir has had incessant rainfall during the past week, flooding homes and triggering landslides in many areas, killing at least 20 people.

On Monday 16 people from two families were buried alive in a village in central Kashmir when a house they had gathered in was hit by a landslide.

Rescuers found the body of a 14-year-old boy on Saturday, five days after he was buried under the landslide along with 15 others whose bodies were extricated earlier.

The bodies of four other people were recovered by rescuers Saturday after they were buried under a similar landslide a day earlier in the Doda area, 250 kilometres south of Srinagar.

Hundreds of people fled their homes fearing floods after days of heavy rainfall just six months after devastating floods hit the region last year, killing around 300 people and destroying infrastructure and property worth estimated $16 billion.

The Indian Met office has forecast more rains in the coming week, but government appealed residents for calm, saying "the worst is over."


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