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kmaherali
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Weather Related

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Once a Source of Life and Renewal, Monsoon Brings Death to Pakistan

With villages swept away and Pakistan’s largest city assailed by monsoon floods, climate change has brought a catastrophic new normal to the country.

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The funeral for Abdul Samad’s mother in Beshonai, a village in the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa region of Pakistan, on Monday.

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By Zia ur-Rehman and Elian PeltierVisuals by Asim Hafeez
Zia ur-Rehman and Asim Hafeez reported from Beshonai, in northern Pakistan, and Elian Peltier from Islamabad, the country’s capital.

Aug. 19, 2025
Walking to his local mosque in northern Pakistan, Abdul Samad cast worried looks at a stream he had never seen so agitated and choked with debris. When he stepped outside again 10 minutes later, the mountain village that was his lifelong home had been nearly erased.

Swollen by pummeling rainfall, the stream had turned into a roaring torrent that swept mud, rocks and fallen trees through the village of Beshonai on Friday, crushing, burying or washing away everything in its path. Out of 210 homes, only 25 remain standing, according to local officials.

“Houses, fields of maize, everything was gone. All I saw were boulders upon boulders,” said Mr. Samad, an imam in his mid 40s. His wife and daughter were swept away with the family home and killed. His mother’s body was not found until Monday, three miles downstream.

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The Indus River, swollen far beyond its banks, near the Swabi district of the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Province.

The monsoon season, once revered as a source of life and renewal, has brought death and devastation across large parts of Pakistan, a South Asian nation of 250 million people. Monsoons have killed more than 700 people nationwide since the season began in late June. This increasingly frequent pattern is forcing Pakistan to reckon with a new reality: Destruction brought by extreme weather has become the norm, not the exception.

In northern Pakistan, floods cascaded down mountain slopes last week, eradicating entire villages. Boulders and pine trees smashed through houses. Mud swallowed whole families.

Video
Deadly Flash Floods Lash Northern Pakistan

1:25

Torrential rains continued pouring on dozens of villages in northern Pakistan, triggering flash floods that have wiped out houses and killed hundreds.
ImageA man stands near a destroyed building.
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A view of the destruction caused by monsoon flooding in Beshonai on Tuesday.

“What we were used to in Pakistan has changed, and for now it is too much,” said Dr. Maryam Ibrahim, an environmental expert and professor of environmental studies at the Lahore University of Management Sciences. “This phenomenon of streams or rivers gradually swelling, in a slow process that would give time for people to evacuate, is gone.”

Mr. Samad said he survived only because the mosque had been built on higher ground. His son and his nephew were pulled to safety by neighbors.

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A stream in the village of Beshonai, seen here Tuesday, turned into a roaring torrent that swept mud, rocks and fallen trees through the village last week.

As he led mourning prayers on Monday and paid a last tribute to his mother, he implored God to have mercy on the community.

Beshonai, in Buner district, is one of dozens of northern villages devastated by rains so heavy and sudden that flash flooding caught officials and communities off guard.

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Men wearing tunics and masks use tools to dig through piles of mud.
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Residents and disaster recovery workers dug through mud at a damaged house in the village of Qadir Nagar on Tuesday.

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Muslim men at prayer stand in a row, their eyes closed and their arms clasped in front of them.
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Imam Abdul Samad leading prayers at a service on Monday.

The highest toll has been recorded in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, a province bordering Afghanistan, where flooding has killed at least 365 people since last Thursday. Buner district suffered the worst devastation, with at least 225 confirmed deaths.

Pakistan’s troubles redoubled on Tuesday, as floodwaters flowed southward, inundating more areas. The port city of Karachi, the country’s economic hub with more than 20 million people, was paralyzed, as residents waded through water that was shoulder-deep in some streets.

The floods are the most devastating Pakistan has endured since 2022, when record monsoon rains killed 1,700 people and submerged a third of the country.

Map locates Beshonai in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan.

Beshonai

Kabul

AFGHANISTAN

KHYBER

PAKHTUNKHWA

Quetta

PAKISTAN

IRAN

INDIA

Karachi

Arabian Sea

200 MILES

By The New York Times

Since then, Pakistan’s successive governments have campaigned for better access to international climate finance, as the country contributes less than 1 percent of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions but is one of the most vulnerable countries to climate change. The World Bank has estimated that Pakistan needs $43 billion on average every year until 2030 to mitigate the effects of global warming.

But in recent days, the country’s authorities have also faced growing criticism for not doing enough to save lives. Critics say they have let deforestation go unchecked, worsening the impact of floods, and have failed to create effective early warning systems.

Video

Flooded streets in the bazaar in Pacha Kalay, in the hard-hit Buner district, on Tuesday.

Aisha Khan, the executive director at the Civil Society Coalition for Climate Change, a Pakistani nonprofit, said the worsening floods could have severe social and political consequences.

“If extreme weather keeps being an annual event, if it keeps hitting people so strongly and trapping them in a circle of perpetual poverty and misery, there will be upheaval,” she said.

Pakistan’s disaster management officials said they sent all the early warnings they could, including through a national app and communications to provincial authorities. But many areas have scant access to the internet, and in Beshonai and other places, people said the warnings from local mosques and police stations came late.

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A man rides a motorcycle through flood water.
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A motorcyclist riding through floodwaters in Qadir Nagar.

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A man standing in the doorway of a storefront dumps mud from a wheelbarrow. Another man uses an implement to dig the mud out.
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Taking mud out of the office of a travel agency in the Pacha Kalay bazaar.

Officials also said that nothing could have prepared the country for what was unleashed on villages like Beshonai.

Watching a video of a cascade of mud devastating a northern village, Muhammad Idriss, an official at the national disaster management agency, asked, “What can the government do against this?”

At the agency’s operation center in Islamabad, the capital, on Tuesday, dozens of weather analysts and officials raced to assess the latest data and issue warnings of more rainfall. Surrounding them in a huge octagonal room, screens displaying videos and maps showed a country assailed by extreme weather — not only floods, but also extreme heat and wildfires.

A week ago, Beshonai, which has become a symbol of Pakistan’s suffering, had 4,000 people, many of them relying on money sent by relatives working abroad.

The few businesses that sustained the other residents are gone.

“This was once a bustling village,” said Shiraz Ali, a college student who was helping with rescue operations on Monday.

“How can anyone be normal in a place like this?”

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A mud-stained clock on a wall.
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A clock in a flood-damaged house in Beshonai.

Elian Peltier is an international correspondent for The Times, covering Afghanistan and Pakistan.

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/19/worl ... e9677ea768
kmaherali
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Climate Change’s Toll in Europe This Summer: Thousands of Extra Deaths

Three times as many people in cities and towns died from severe heat as would have done in a world without human-caused warming, scientists said.

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A tourist outside the Acropolis in Athens in July.Credit...Angelos Tzortzinis/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Raymond Zhong

Sept. 17, 2025, 12:01 a.m. ET
Severe heat this summer killed three times as many people in European cities as would have died had humans not warmed the planet by burning fossil fuels, scientists said Wednesday.

The new analysis was based on historical mortality trends, not actual death records, which are not yet widely available. The researchers looked at 854 European cities and towns, where they estimated that a total of 24,400 people died as a result of this summer’s heat.

The findings reflect a worrying pattern: Rising temperatures are increasing the risks to human health more quickly than communities and societies can adapt.

Nearly all heat-related deaths are preventable, said Malcolm Mistry, an assistant professor of climate and geospatial modeling at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine who contributed to the analysis. And governments in Europe, the fastest-warming continent, have taken steps to protect their citizens.

So the fact that so many people still die each summer “shows that we are not able to keep pace with global warming,” Dr. Mistry said.

Summer after stifling summer, extreme heat is transforming Europe. Wildfires are worsening. Cities are rethinking the way they’re built. Companies are struggling to keep workers safe.

In 2022, during what was at that point the continent’s hottest summer on record, more than 61,000 people died from the heat, scientists have estimated. More than half of those people wouldn’t have died if not for global warming caused by greenhouse gas emissions, deforestation and other human activities, researchers concluded.

The scientists behind the new analysis, which hasn’t yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal, said their aim was to provide “early estimates” of this summer’s heat fatalities. They examined European cities and towns with more than 50,000 residents and adequately long records of local deaths. In total, these areas account for 30 percent of Europe’s population.

The researchers first used climate models to estimate that these areas would have been 4 degrees Fahrenheit, or 2.2 degrees Celsius, cooler on average from June through August in a hypothetical world that hadn’t been altered by planet-warming emissions.


//2024 Brought the World to a Dangerous Warming Threshold. Now What? https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/202 ... -goal.html
//Global temperatures last year crept past a key goal, raising questions about how much nations can stop the planet from heating up further.

Then, by extrapolating from past mortality rates, the researchers estimated that only around 8,000 people in these cities would have died from heat in those months in that alternate, cooler world, instead of the 24,400 people who likely did so in the real world.

Rome, Athens and Bucharest, Romania, were the European capitals with the highest number of heat-related deaths after adjusting for city population, the researchers found. But when it comes to the share of deaths that can be attributed to climate change, the highest ranked capitals were Stockholm, Madrid and Bratislava, Slovakia.

Sweden’s capital might seem like an unlikely holder of the top spot. “Before, we had very few, if any heat-related deaths in Northern Europe,” said Garyfallos Konstantinoudis, a climate scientist at Imperial College London who worked on the new analysis.

From that low base, however, global warming is now starting to lift summer temperatures in northern countries into the range where they can harm human health, Dr. Konstantinoudis said. Far fewer people still die of heat there than in Southern Europe, but when they do, it is much more squarely the result of climate change, he said.

Warming Summers in Europe

Climate Change Is Transforming Summer in Europe https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/28/clim ... -heat.html
Aug. 28, 2025

As Europe’s Heat Waves Intensify, France Bickers About Air-Conditioning https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/12/worl ... oning.html
Aug. 12, 2025

It’s Paradise Lost as Climate Change Remakes Europe’s Summers https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/14/worl ... -heat.html
July 14, 2025
Raymond Zhong reports on climate and environmental issues for The Times

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/17/clim ... e9677ea768
kmaherali
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One Million Evacuated in China as Typhoon Ragasa Barrels Toward Coast

The storm left 14 dead in Taiwan, and flooded Hong Kong and Macau, disrupting flights.

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Hong Kong residents prepared for the worst as Typhoon Ragasa, the most powerful storm so far this year, approached. The typhoon has prompted thousands of evacuations in China.CreditCredit...Tyrone Siu/Reuters

Typhoon Ragasa, the most powerful storm in the world so far this year, slammed into Hong Kong early Wednesday, flooding coastal areas and lashing the city with pelting rain and powerful winds that toppled trees.

The typhoon — which made its first landfall in the Philippines on Monday before heading back out to sea — was expected to continue moving west on Wednesday, making a second landfall later in China’s southern Guangdong Province. The authorities there have evacuated more than a million people, state media reported.

The typhoon’s destructive path crossed the south of Taiwan on Tuesday, killing 14 people and leaving 124 people missing, as of Wednesday morning.

Raging floodwaters collapsed a bridge, the island’s emergency department said at a news conference Tuesday evening. The dead and missing came from one part of Hualien County, in the east, the agency said, and almost 8,000 people were evacuated across Taiwan.

ImageAn overhead view of a river of muddy floodwater amid a grassy valley.
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Mud and receding floodwaters flowed in Hualien County.Credit... Taiwan's Central News Agency, via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Videos posted on social media showed people trapped in their homes waiting to be rescued, and cars being carried away by murky floodwaters. In one dramatic clip, a woman is seen clinging to a utility pole in a market to avoid being carried away by chest-high water. Authorities later confirmed that she was rescued.

Ragasa has prompted the cancellation of hundreds of flights, mass evacuations and the closure of Hong Kong’s Disneyland and Macau’s casinos.

Experts say that typhoons are increasing in the region, and officials are bracing for Ragasa to be one of the worst in years.

The Hong Kong Observatory issued its highest storm signal, level 10, at 2:40 a.m. on Wednesday. The forecaster said that rain could fall at a rate of more than an inch per hour and that the sea level in eastern Hong Kong had reached more than 12 feet above normal by Wednesday morning. It urged residents not to go outside.

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A woman picks up a package of eggs from a mostly empty shelf.
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Empty shelves at a supermarket in Hong Kong on Tuesday as Typhoon Ragasa approached. Credit...Mladen Antonov/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

On Tuesday, crowds had gathered by coastlines in Hong Kong to watch the crashing waves. Among the spectators, a child and his mother had gotten swept into the sea and were rushed to intensive care after being rescued, according to the police.

Hong Kong Observatory’s forecasters had earlier warned that Ragasa could cause damage comparable to that of Typhoon Mangkhut in 2018, when ferocious winds shattered hundreds of glass windows in the city’s skyscrapers. Eric Chan, Hong Kong’s No. 2 official, described Ragasa as a “serious threat” to the city.

Nineteen people were injured and dozens of trees had fallen as of Wednesday morning, the Hong Kong authorities reported.

The city’s Disneyland resort was closed, horse races were canceled, classes were suspended and office workers went home early. Supermarket shelves were emptied as residents stocked up on food, and many taped their windows at home. Maintenance workers set up flood barriers, covered outdoor escalators and secured sculptures to the ground.

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Two airline workers walk through an empty terminal.
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An empty check-in counter at the Hong Kong International Airport on Tuesday.Credit...Chan Long Hei/Associated Press

At least 600 flights from Cathay Pacific, Hong Kong Airlines and other carriers have been canceled at Hong Kong International Airport. The airport said that its runways would continue to operate and that some restaurants and shops would stay open for 24 hours for stranded passengers. The airport authority said that it handled 600 flights on Tuesday, and that there were no passengers remaining in restricted areas. In Taiwan, 270 flights were canceled.

The gambling hub of Macau announced that casinos would be temporarily closed from Tuesday evening.

After hitting China, the storm is expected to continue westward, reaching as far as Vietnam and Laos later this week.

In the Philippines, the state weather bureau said Monday that the storm had caused heavy rains and landslides in areas in the north, many of which were still struggling with flooding from previous storms.

Amy Chang Chien contributed reporting from Taipei and David Pierson from Hong Kong.

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kmaherali
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Typhoon Bualoi Slams Into Central Vietnam, Adding to Death Toll

At least 13 people were killed and dozens more injured in central Vietnam, where 2 million were without power. Bualoi’s deadly path had started with 10 deaths in the Philippines.

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Typhoon Bualoi lashed central Vietnam, making landfall on Sunday evening. The region was already reeling from Typhoon Kajiki which hit a month earlier.CreditCredit...Thai An/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images


By Tung Ngo
Reporting from Hanoi, Vietnam

Sept. 29, 2025
Updated 7:46 a.m. ET
Typhoon Bualoi tore into Vietnam’s central coast on Monday, leaving at least 13 people dead and 46 injured, according to a government official at the Ministry of Agriculture and Environment. The storm had hammered the Philippines over the weekend, killing at least 10 people there.

The storm made landfall on Sunday at around 11 p.m. local time with a wind speed of between 73 and 83 miles per hour, according to media reports that cited the state weather forecaster. On Monday, rescuers struggled to reach communities isolated by landslides and flash floods. As the storm moved west, rain continued to swell in hydropower reservoirs in the area, threatening to cause more damage.

Vietnam’s state-owned power utility EVN said efforts were underway to restore electricity to nearly two million homes across central Vietnam.

“This typhoon is one of the strongest to hit the areas it swept through in the last two decades,” said Huy Nguyen, a local weather forecaster. “It created widespread damage because it stayed inland for many hours — between six and 11 hours — after making landfall.”

Rescue teams saved 13 people who had been trapped by rising floodwaters at a farm by a river in Thanh Hoa Province on Monday afternoon, according to local media reports. At least 21 others were missing or had lost contact with their families, according to the government official.


Tracking Typhoon Bualoi
See the likely path and wind arrival times for Bualoi

Bualoi had maximum sustained winds of about 90 m.p.h., according to the Joint Typhoon Warning Center in Hawaii, as it ripped across a large swath of central Vietnam. The region was already reeling from the devastation caused by Typhoon Kajiki only a month earlier.

The timing of the storms has left little time for recovery.

“The previous typhoon destroyed my home. All the roof was blown away. I had just fixed my house with loans. Today, this typhoon has damaged my home again,” said Tran Thi Ha, 40, who lives in Ha Tinh Province.

Bualoi’s effects were felt across the region. In Ninh Binh Province, approximately 124 miles from the storm’s eye, severe thunderstorms caused homes to collapse and killed nine people. Vietnam’s central Ha Tinh Province, which the eye of the storm passed directly over, reported that vast areas lost power.

“We expect the rain will continue,” said Tran Huu Khanh, deputy director of the Ha Tinh Department of Agriculture and Environment. “We are mobilizing resources to respond to the further risks of flash floods and landslides.”

Vietnam had evacuated tens of thousands of residents over the weekend before Bualoi’s arrival as a precautionary measure.

It was expected to dissipate over the next 24 hours, according to the typhoon center. “The typhoon continues to pour rain over Laos and the border region with Vietnam,” Dr. Huy warned. “The impact and danger of the typhoon are not over yet.”

Tung Ngo is a Times reporter and researcher based in Hanoi, Vietnam.

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kmaherali
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Floods and Landslides in Nepal Worsen Woes of a Nation in Flux

Last month, nationwide protests ousted the government. Now, Nepal’s interim leaders are dealing with heavy rains that have snarled transportation and killed dozens.

Video:
Nepal’s interim leaders are dealing with flooding that has killed dozens and snarled transportation.CreditCredit...Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters

By Binod Ghimire
Reporting from Kathmandu, Nepal

Oct. 5, 2025
Landslides and floods set off by incessant rainfall have killed at least 40 people in Nepal, officials said on Sunday, adding to the woes of an interim government struggling to find its footing after violent protests deposed its predecessor.

The highways connecting the federal capital, Kathmandu, with the rest of the country have been obstructed since Saturday morning, and flights have been disrupted, police officials said.

The transportation nightmare stranded a large number of people who were returning to the capital at the end of Dashain, the biggest Hindu festival. The government closed offices on Sunday, which is a working day in Nepal, and Monday, indicating the gravity of the situation.

Officials said the death toll could rise. Nepal’s army mobilized troops and helicopters and was carrying out rescue operations in over two dozen locations, it said in a statement on Sunday.

Nepal’s disaster management authority said 40 people were killed in landslides and floods in Koshi Province, in the country’s southeast, while three others were struck by lightning in nearby Madhesh Province. Kalidas Dhaubaji, the spokesman for Nepal’s Armed Police Force, said at least 11 people, including four trekkers on the famous Langtang route, were still missing.

The central province of Bagmati was heavily affected by the intense rainfall that started on Friday night. The security agencies also evacuated dozens of people living in slums along river banks in the Kathmandu Valley as the overflowing rivers entered the settlements.

The rainfall stopped in the central provinces on Sunday morning, but it continued in eastern parts of the country.

Heavy rains also wreaked havoc in neighboring India. In the state of Bihar, which borders Nepal, officials said floods and lightning had killed at least 10 people and injured 13. Much of the state was under an emergency alert as rivers were swollen, and citizens were advised to stay away from low-lying areas.

In Darjeeling, in the Indian state of West Bengal, at least 20 people were killed in a cyclone, according to Harsh V. Shringla, a lawmaker from the state.

“Areas across the hills have been cut off, and roads destroyed,” Mr. Shringla said on social media. “This has disrupted normal life and caused considerable hardship to many.”

In Nepal, a small Himalayan nation that is highly prone to natural disasters, rain-induced disasters claim hundreds of lives and inflict huge damage to properties every year. But the disaster on Sunday comes as the country’s infrastructure and response mechanisms are particularly unstable, following a daunting political transition.

Violent protests over entrenched corruption and economic stagnation last month toppled the government and damaged many government offices.

Prime Minister Sushila Karki, who leads the interim government, urged the public in a brief video message to avoid commuting unless it was an emergency.

Ms. Karki, 73, a retired Supreme Court justice, was tapped by the protesters to lead the interim government and help change a system they saw as long exploited by a few elite political families. She has been trying to complete her cabinet appointments and clean up government buildings that were burned and ransacked, and she has called for elections to be held early next year.

Mujib Mashal and Suhasini Raj contributed reporting.

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kmaherali
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Hundreds of Hikers Stranded on Mount Everest by Snowstorm

The snowfall buried tents and reduced visibility. The local authorities said that they were in contact with the hikers and that rescue efforts were underway.

Video:
The snow reduced visibility and left hundreds of hikers stuck on Mount Everest.CreditCredit...Geshuang Chen, via Reuters

By Vivian Wang
Reporting from Beijing

Oct. 6, 2025, 1:55 a.m. ET

Hundreds of people were trapped on Mount Everest after heavy snow over the weekend, according to the Chinese authorities, prompting a closure of the scenic area during a national holiday that had drawn large numbers of tourists to the site.

The local government of Shigatse, a city in Tibet that includes the Chinese side of Mount Everest, said in an announcement on Sunday night that rescue workers were in touch with the stranded hikers, and that they had sufficient supplies, without saying for how long. It did not specify how many people were still on the mountain either. (Mount Everest is on the border of China and Nepal, and the eastern slopes are in Tibet.)

China’s central broadcaster reported on Sunday that 350 people had arrived safely at a rescue point in the town of Qudang in Tibet, and that over 200 others were on their way there. Reached by phone on Monday, staff members at several local tourism authorities said they were unclear about the state of the rescue operation.

Footage obtained by Reuters showed a line of hikers trekking through the snow on Sunday, with apparently poor visibility as snow continued to fall. Another video filmed from inside a tent, showed that the tent’s ropes were partly buried.

The snow began during the night on Saturday, according to the local government announcement. It buried tents at a campsite at an elevation of more than 4,900 meters, or 16,000 feet, on the mountain’s eastern slope, and left some hikers with hypothermia, according to Chinese Communist Party-controlled Metropolitan Express News, based in the city of Hangzhou.

The Mount Everest Scenic Area as well as surrounding tourist attractions were closed until further notice because of icy roads and unsafe conditions, according to a notice posted on social media by the area’s operators.

Shangyou News, a party-controlled outlet based in the city of Chongqing, said that the snowfall was the heaviest in recent years to fall during the weeklong holiday around China’s National Day on Oct. 1.

Chen Geshuang, a hiker who was safely evacuated to Qudang, told Reuters that her guide said he had never encountered such weather in October.

Mount Everest has become an increasingly popular site for Chinese visitors in recent years, as the government has poured money into building tourist infrastructure. Last year, more than 540,000 people visited the area, setting a record, according to Chinese state media.

Siyi Zhao contributed research.

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