Heavy rain in border regions between Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan spurred mudslides that have left 14 dead, authorities in the Central Asian countries said on Tuesday.
Landslides hit the mountainous region every year, blocking roads and often forcing families to rebuild homes from scratch.
Kyrgyzstan officials said the bodies of six people had been recovered and two children were missing after landslides swept through villages in the west of the country.
At least eight people were unaccounted for in Aksy district after floods destroyed homes and bridges, the emergency ministry said.
"Two children in the village of Tashtak were washed away by the torrent," it said, noting that six bodies had been recovered.
Amateur footage posted by a local news organisation showed rapid flows of earth and water carrying dozens of trees and branches near rural homes in the region.
President Sadyr Japarov ordered the government to take "all necessary measures as soon as possible" to provide assistance and offered condolences to the families of the victims.
The emergency services said roughly 20 rescuers and dozens more locals were working to find the missing.
Those same deluges descended on eastern Uzbekistan, authorities there said later Tuesday, claiming eight lives and leaving six others injured.
Emergency services were working on the scene in the Kasansay district, its press service said.
In Tajikistan in Central Asia in May, at least eight people were killed and property damaged in landslides in rural regions.
At least six dead, several missing after India landslides and floods
Shimla, India (AFP) July 13, 2021 –
Rescuers in northern India were digging through rocks and mud searching for the missing on Tuesday, after heavy monsoon rains triggered landslides and flash floods in two states, killing at least six people, officials said.
Television footage and videos shared on social media showed roads, cars and homes being washed away in Dharamshala in the Himalayan state of Himachal Pradesh, which has been lashed by torrential rains since the weekend.
One body was recovered and five people were rescued at Boh village, where one of the landslides took place, officials said.
Two more bodies were found in landslides and flash floods elsewhere in the state.
"NDRF (National Disaster Response Force) men continued to search for the missing in the night and after daybreak at Boh village… where nine people are still missing," Kangra district's police superintendent Vimukt Ranjan told AFP on Tuesday.
In the neighbouring state of Uttarakhand, officials told the Press Trust of India that three members of a family were killed when their house collapsed during a landslide on Sunday.
Dharamshala is a popular tourist destination and also home to a large number of Tibetan refugees, including their spiritual leader the Dalai Lama.
Tourists have flocked to the town in recent weeks — triggering Covid-19 social distancing warnings — as temperatures soared in northern India ahead of the arrival of the annual monsoon deluge.
Authorities said tourists should avoid the region amid forecasts of more heavy rains that could lead to landslides in the next 24 hours.
The monsoon is crucial to replenishing water supplies in South Asia, but also causes widespread death and destruction across the region each year.
Nearly 80 people were killed in three states in northern and western India over the weekend after being struck by lightning.