KATHMANDU: Half of the passengers in a bus carrying 43 Indians died on Friday when the vehicle plunged into a rain-swollen river in neighbouring Nepal, a spokesperson for the Himalayan nation's armed police said.
A total of 21 people died and 22 were injured, Shailendra Thapa, a spokesperson for the armed police said, adding that all 41 passengers and two crew were Indian and headed to capital Kathmandu from the tourist city of Pokhara when the accident occurred.
Roads in the mountainous region can challenge drivers as they are often narrow and treacherous, making it tough to manoeuvre large vehicles around hairpin curves.
Rescuers pulled 22 people from the rain-swollen waters of the Marsyangdi river in the Tanahun district, about 118km (73-miles) from Kathmandu, of which 12 were seriously injured and airlifted to the capital.
Police and army teams climbed down long metal ladders to reach the river, using ropes to pull out the injured and dead.
Exhausted women and children lay amid debris scattered on the banks of the fast-flowing river as rescuers hauled a nearly fainting child out of danger, video images showed.
India's neighbouring state of Uttar Pradesh, where passengers had boarded the bus, is sending an official to coordinate rescue efforts, news agency ANI said.
Legislation defies Trump's demand to green light trillions of dollars in new debt
Votes on budgets, other spending are considered confidence measures, if govt loses one, it falls
Regional premier Haseloff says man was "lone attacker", 50-year-old doctor
Attacker identified as 50-year-old male doctor from Saudi Arabia who holds permanent residency in Germany
Jagmeet Singh’s NDP has been pivotal in sustaining PM Trudeau’s govt in recent years since last elections
"Macron resign," "you're talking nonsense," "water, water, water", young people and mothers shout at president