Search resumes for trekkers in Nepal

Nepalese emergency workers have resumed their search for survivors after 32 people perished in a snowstorm on a popular tourist circuit.

People gather as a Nepalese army rescue helicopter arrives.

A snowstorm and avalanche in Nepal's Himalayas has killed 17 trekkers, officials have said. (AAP)

Nepal's prime minister has pledged to set up a weather warning system after a major Himalayan snowstorm killed 32 people at the height of the trekking season, 17 of them tourists.

Forecasters had predicted the snowstorm, but many walkers appeared to have been caught unaware and were heading to an exposed high mountain pass that forms part of the popular Annapurna Circuit trekking route when it struck.

Keshav Pandey of the Trekking Agencies' Association of Nepal (TAAN) said it was the worst loss of life in a single day for trekkers, guides and porters in the country and called for a better system to warn tourists.

Nepal's Prime Minister Sushil Koirala pledged to provide better weather information in tourist areas, saying the loss of life was "extremely tragic at a time when worldwide weather updates are available every second".

"I want to assure that the government will make efforts to establish early warning centres for weather in the important spots across the country, especially in the Himalayan areas and along rivers," he said in a statement Thursday.

On Friday, emergency workers on foot and in helicopters resumed their search for survivors, rescuing seven more people, including two tourists, a day after they airlifted more than 150 to safety.

They also recovered the body of a Nepalese porter from under the ice, taking the toll to 32, including 24 trekkers on the Annapurna circuit and five climbers on a mountain in the area.

Local official Tulsiram Bhandari said that the bodies of the two Slovakian mountaineers and their three Nepalese guides, killed when an avalanche struck the base camp of the 8167-metre Mount Dhaulagiri, had now been found.

Thousands of people head to the Annapurna region every October, when weather conditions are usually clear and cool.

The Annapurna Circuit is particularly popular among tourists, and has come to be known as the "apple pie" trek for the food served at the small lodges, known as teahouses, that line the route.

But many appeared to have been unprepared for the conditions on the Thorong La pass, which bore the brunt of Tuesday's unseasonal snowstorm.


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