At least 66 people have died and 69 people are missing, authorities say, after intense rainfall in Nepal caused flooding and landslides.
The death toll in the main Asian country is likely to fall as the rains, which are expected to continue through Tuesday, are expected to cover the valley around the capital, Kathmandu.
While videos of persons stranded on rooftops has been captured, thousands of homes near streams have been flooded, and the majority of highways have been blocked.
Over 200mm ( 7.9in ) of rainfall over the Kathmandu valley, where many of the deaths have occurred, has been flooding nearly every river within the area since Friday evening.
Floods have even caused a number of the casualties.
Five folks, including a pregnant woman and a four-year-old woman, died when a home collapsed due to a disaster in Bhaktapur, to the south of Kathmandu, state media reviews.
Two systems have been removed from a vehicle buried by a landslide in Dhading, north of Kathmandu. Twelve persons, including the drivers, were said to be onboard.
A disaster at a training facility run by the All Nepal Football Association in Makwanpur, south-west of the investment, even caused six football players to die.
Others have been swept up in waters.
Four people who needed to be saved were washed away in the southeastern Kathmandu river by the Nakkhu River in a dramatic landscape.
” For days, they kept on pleading for help”, Jitendra Bhandari, an observer, told the BBC. ” We may do nothing”.
Three of those people were rescued inland, but one is still missing.
In Kathmandu, Hari Om Malla lost his vehicle after it was submerged in water.
He claimed to the BBC that as the weather continued to pour into the house on Friday nights, water “gushed” into it.
” We jumped up, swam, and got away from it- but my wallet, backpack and cellular have been swept aside by the river. I have little then. We spent the entire day in the cool.
Thus far, more than 2, 000 persons have been rescued from floods, while at least 200 homes have been damaged, according to the state-run Radio Nepal.
The Nepalese household affairs ministry said that as of Saturday, 60 persons had been injured.
Personal homes, offices, shopping facilities, clinics and police messages were seen inundated in video posted in social media.
According to Prithvi Subba Gurung, a spokesman for the state, waterpipes and power lines were also damaged by the flooding, according to Nepal Television Corporation.
According to state media, 10, 000 police officers, as well as individuals and people of the army, have been mobilised as part of search and rescue work.
The Bangladeshi authorities urged people to avoid unwanted go and forbade nighttime driving in the Kathmandu river to reduce road accidents.
Most roads, including those that connect the Kathmandu Valley to the rest of the nation, have been slowed down in a number of locations.
Air travel was likewise affected on Friday and Saturday, with some private flights delayed or cancelled.
Every year, Nepal experiences horrible floods and landslides during the rainfall season.
Experts say, though, that rainfall occasions are becoming more powerful due to climate change.
A cooler atmosphere may hold more moisture, while warmer ocean waters may energise wind devices, making them more chaotic.