Rain hampers Nepal landslide search

Rain is hampering rescue efforts after a landslide in Nepal swept through six mountain villages, leaving 24 dead and dozens unaccounted for.

Army rangers on watch in front of a landslide in Langtang valley

Rain is hampering rescue efforts after a landslide in Nepal swept through six mountain villages. (AAP)

Rescuers have searched through piles of rocks and debris after a landslide swept through six mountainous Nepalese villages, killing 24 people and leaving dozens more missing.

Heavy rainfall is hampering the search and rescue in Taplejung district, about 500km east of the capital, Kathmandu, where the landslide caught residents asleep on Wednesday night.

A lull in the monsoon rains on Thursday afternoon enabled a rescue helicopter to evacuate eight injured people.

Twenty-four bodies have been dug up, but dozens more are reported missing, police official Shanti Raj Koirala says.

The remote area was pounded by the highest rainfall in 27 years, according to the Nepal's Department Of Hydrology and Meteorology.

The nearest town is at least five hours' away on foot when the weather is good and there are no government offices or police stations in the area.

Landslides are common in mountainous Nepal during the rainy season, which began in June and ends in September.

The Himalayan nation is still recovering from earthquakes in April and May that killed more than 8700 people and caused massive damage, with many of the roads cut off by landslides.

Meanwhile, the government announced on Thursday it will hire international experts to study trekking routes in the mountains of Nepal to see if they are safe for hikers to return.

Nineteen people were killed and scores injured in an avalanche at Mount Everest base camp triggered by the April 25 quake.

Also, the trails around the Langtang valley in northern Nepal were completely damaged and an entire village buried by a landslide and avalanche set off by the earthquake.

Tens of thousands of foreigners come to Nepal every year to trek on the foothills of the Himalayan peaks and the next trekking season is due to start in September.


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Source: AAP


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