- Four Pakistan Army soldiers killed in avalanche in Astore district
- Two Indian soldiers killed in Kargil, three Nepalese workers killed on LoC, five Kashmiris buried under snow in IHK
Unusually heavy snowfall has unleashed avalanches and collapsed homes in the Himalayan region of Kashmir, killing at least 14 people on both sides of the de-facto border between India and Pakistan, officials said.
Ten died in the India-held portion of the territory, police said, while Pakistan’s military reported another four soldiers dead in an avalanche on that side of the border.
The statement from the Pakistani military said four soldiers were killed when 26 troops came under a huge flow of snow late on Tuesday night near the northern district of Astore, about 155 kilometres from Skardu.
The statement added that, despite extreme weather condition, 22 soldiers were “evacuated through heroic efforts” by rescuers.
The Pakistani military provided no further details.
On the Indian side, dozens were evacuated from high-risk areas Wednesday, after avalanches killed two Indian army soldiers camped in the Kargil region and another three Nepalese labourers working near the heavily militarised Line of Control (LoC).
Another five people were killed when dozens of homes crumpled under the weight of snow in the southern Kulgam and Shopian areas on the India-held side, police officer Imtiyaz Hussain said.
Avalanches are common in the mountainous region, especially in spring when the air has more moisture and snow is heavier. But the region has seen an unusually heavy snowfall for March, with 2 feet falling in the past three days, said Farooq Ahmed Khan of India-held Kashmir’s Meteorological Department.
The last similar late-season snowfall was in 2007, when about 2 feet fell during a short time in March. “It’s definitely unprecedented to have such heavy snowfall in one single spell for three days,” Khan said.
The snow disrupted power and communication lines in India-held Kashmir, while cutting some areas off from the rest of India. Authorities issued a “high danger avalanche” warning in many parts of the region, government official Amir Ali said.
Avalanches have caused some of the heaviest tolls for the Indian and Pakistani armies camped near the de-facto frontier dividing their territories.
In 2012, a massive avalanche on the Pakistani side of the Siachen glacier killed 140 people, including 129 soldiers. That same year, a wave of snow also buried an Indian army camp and killed 16 soldiers in another place along the Line of Control.
Siachen is located on the northern tip of Kashmir, a Himalayan region which is divided between Pakistan and neighboring India.
In 2010, another 17 Indian soldiers died when a wall of snow slammed into the army’s High Altitude Warfare School.