
At least 44 dead in flash floods on popular Himalayan pilgrimage route
Following a cloudburst in the region's Chositi village, which triggered floods and landslides, disaster management official Mohammed Irshad estimated that at least 50 people were still missing, with many believed to have been washed away.
A building damaged in flash floods caused by torrential rains is seen in a remote, mountainous village in the Chositi area, India-controlled Kashmir (AP)
India's deputy minister for science and technology, Jitendra Singh, warned that the disaster 'could result in substantial' loss of life.
At least 50 of the rescued people, many of whom were brought from a stream under mud and debris, were seriously injured and were being treated in local hospitals, said Susheel Kumar Sharma, a local official.
Chositi is a remote Himalayan village in Kashmir's Kishtwar district and is the last village accessible to motor vehicles on the route of an ongoing annual Hindu pilgrimage to a mountainous shrine at an altitude of 3,000 metres (9,500 feet) and about an eight-kilometre (5-mile) trek from the village.
Multiple pilgrims were also feared to be affected by the disaster.
Officials said that the pilgrimage had been suspended and more rescue teams were on the way to the area to strengthen rescue and relief operations.
The pilgrimage began on July 25 and was scheduled to end on September 5.
The first responders to the disaster were villagers and local officials who were later joined by police and disaster management officials, as well as personnel from India's military and paramilitary forces, Mr Sharma said.
Abdul Majeed Bichoo, a local resident and a social activist from a neighbouring village, said that he witnessed the bodies of eight people being pulled out from under the mud.
Three horses, which were also completely buried alongside them under debris, were 'miraculously recovered alive', he said.
The 75-year-old Bichoo said Chositi village had become a 'sight of complete devastation from all sides' following the disaster.
Buildings damaged in flash floods caused by torrential rains are seen in a remote, mountainous village, in the Chositi area, India-controlled Kashmir (AP)
'It was heartbreaking and an unbearable sight. I have not seen this kind of destruction of life and property in my life,' he said.
The devastating floods swept away the main community kitchen set up for the pilgrims as well as dozens of vehicles and motorbikes, officials said.
They added that more than 200 pilgrims were in the kitchen when the tragedy struck. The flash floods also damaged and washed away many homes, clustered together in the foothills.
Photos and videos circulating on social media showed extensive damage caused in the village with multiple vehicles and homes damaged.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said that 'the situation is being monitored closely' and offered his prayers to 'all those affected by the cloudburst and flooding'.
'Rescue and relief operations are underway. Every possible assistance will be provided to those in need,' he said in a social media post.
Sudden, intense downpours over small areas known as cloudbursts are increasingly common in India's Himalayan regions, which are prone to flash floods and landslides.
Cloudbursts have the potential to wreak havoc by causing intense flooding and landslides, impacting thousands of people in the mountainous regions.
Experts say cloudbursts have increased in recent years partly because of climate change, while damage from the storms also has increased because of unplanned development in mountain regions.
Kishtwar is home to multiple hydroelectric power projects, which experts have long warned pose a threat to the region's fragile ecosystem.

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Scotsman
6 hours ago
- Scotsman
VJ Day: Family find Scottish veteran's accounts of his 'forgotten war' in attic
Sign up to our History and Heritage newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... A family's discovery of a box of papers and photographs in an attic which document their father's service in the Far East has unravelled the brutal reality of the 'forgotten war' that he never spoke about. The documents were kept by Captain JCT MacRobert, a Paisley lawyer who was evacuated at Dunkirk and then sent to Burma and India, where he described the Japanese in his account of the 1944 Battle of Kohima as 'a cruel and fanatical an enemy as the world has ever known'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Indian and Gurkha soldiers inspect captured Japanese ordnance following the Battle of Kohima in 1944. PIC: Getty. | Getty Daughter Fiona Garwood, of Edinburgh, said her father never discussed the war, with his 'Burma hat', which he bought in Calcutta and wore every summer in Scotland, a constant but silent reminder of his service. The newly discovered papers are, meanwhile, a clear and visceral account of the horrors of jungle warfare. READ MORE: Ahmadiyya Muslims in Scotland Mark 80th Anniversary of VJ Day with gratitude and prayers for peace From his own accounts and local maps, it is now known that he was responsible for claiming a hilltop position - known as MacRobert Hill. The recent discovery made at the former home of her parents in Colintraive in Argyll and Bute had been 'huge' for the family, Ms Garwood added. She said: 'They are very much eyewitness accounts of the time. He wrote things down when he had time on the back of army requisition sheets, in pencil. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Then, he added a bit more when he waited to be repatriated but I really don't know if he looked at them again, as everything was very hidden away in an attic. 'We didn't know about it - or his photo album. We didn't even know he had a camera. 'We didn't discover the box until earlier this year so it was a huge find. 'I am very proud of him, because he did write it down and I am so glad he did. He didn't speak about it, but the family now know of his time spent there from his writing.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad READ MORE: The beautifully written war time letter from wife to soldier found hidden behind my fireplace Captain MacRobert, an officer in the Royal Artillery, part of the British Army 2nd Division, fought in the Battle of Kohima in June 1944, a turning point in the Japanese invasion of India and the war against the Axis powers. Later, Earl Mountbatten described Kohima, which raged between April and June, as 'probably one of the greatest battles in history…in effect the Battle of Burma… naked unparalleled heroism…the British/Indian Thermopylae'. The water carrier of Captain CJT MacRobert which is on show at the Kohima Museum in York. His family have no idea how it got there. PIC: Contributed. | Contributed Around 4,000 allied troops and around 7,000 Japanese soldiers were killed at Kohima an important hill station and garrison in Assam on the only road that led from the major British/Indian supply depot at Dimapur to Imphal. The Japanese Army was broken into three different columns to attack it from three different angles. Captain MacRobert was part of the fighting force of the 2nd British Division, the 161st Indian Brigade and the 33rd Indian Brigade at Kohima, which served alongside Burmese, Australian, American and African troops. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Later, Captain MacRobert, described Kohima as 'our El-Alamein ' in reference to the climax of the North African campaign, when the British defeated the Axis army of Italy and Germany. READ MORE: Why those who wish we would stop remembering World War Two are just plain wrong On the end of the operation at Kohima , he wrote: 'At last the hard pressed Kohima Garrison was relieved in after one of the most gallant and bloody defences against as cruel and fanatical an enemy as the world has ever known.' The garrison itself was held by a small group of Indian and British troops, who fought to defend it with little ammunition, diminishing supplies of food and water, medical supplies and hardly any sleep. It was finally reached by allied forces by road, with a long column of ambulances shepherded in by grey tanks and their 'sharply crackling' guns. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Captain MacRobert wrote of the greenery of Garrison Hill turning to 'grey and blackened splintered devastation' as the perimeter was fought over for He wrote: 'From far off, many nights I watched the perimeter battles. Leaping flames and occasional flares cast and revealed moving shadows, some of which were charging infantry men. 'Smoke streamed across that narrow deadly belt . D.F. (Direct Fire) from distant guns, grenades and mortar bombs from closer crashed into it.' Many wounded were brought out who had 'lain in agony and peril for so long in that relentlessly contracting perimeter,' Captain MacRobert wrote. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Their dead, so soon to be joined by so many more of ours, they left behind,' he added. A map of the Kohima area which shows top right McRobert Hill (sic), named after Captain JCT MacRobert, of Paisley. | Contributed The ordeal continued for several days, much of it across the Deputy Commissioner's tennis court, until desperate attempts to get tanks and six pounders up the steep bank to his garden succeeded. There, the Japanese hid in bunkers under his bungalow. Ms Garwood said her father, in later life, formed a type of Kohima Veterans Association to connect with others who fought at the hill station. She added: 'That must have been their therapy, to meet up with people you fought with years later when you could face it and talk to them. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'They understood - they knew what you meant. The families didn't , and perhaps didn't want to know as it was too painful.' Captain MacRobert returned to Scotland by early 1946 and spent the rest of his life working as a solicitor in the family firm in Paisley. 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BBC News
9 hours ago
- BBC News
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Mr Fenton grew up in Oswaldtwistle before being drafted into the Lancashire Fusiliers in July 1942, joining the Royal Artillery after his basic training was February the following year, the 178th Field Regiment he was part of was sent the journey onboard the Britannic, a leisure ship seconded to the military as part of the war effort, he said: "We didn't know where we were going."They had given us tropical kit but, of course, it's all very secretive and nobody wants to say where you're going to give anything away to the enemy."Arriving six weeks later in Cape Town, South Africa, the regiment transferred to another ship for the journey to Bombay in India, now known as Mumbai."When we got there, of course, we knew it was fairly obvious where we were going - we were going to be fighting the Japanese in Burma." 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Read more stories from the Isle of Man on the BBC, watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer and follow BBC Isle of Man on Facebook and X.


Glasgow Times
20 hours ago
- Glasgow Times
At least 44 dead in flash floods on popular Himalayan pilgrimage route
Rescue teams scouring the devastated Himalayan village brought at least 200 people to safety. Following a cloudburst in the region's Chositi village, which triggered floods and landslides, disaster management official Mohammed Irshad estimated that at least 50 people were still missing, with many believed to have been washed away. A building damaged in flash floods caused by torrential rains is seen in a remote, mountainous village in the Chositi area, India-controlled Kashmir (AP) India's deputy minister for science and technology, Jitendra Singh, warned that the disaster 'could result in substantial' loss of life. At least 50 of the rescued people, many of whom were brought from a stream under mud and debris, were seriously injured and were being treated in local hospitals, said Susheel Kumar Sharma, a local official. Chositi is a remote Himalayan village in Kashmir's Kishtwar district and is the last village accessible to motor vehicles on the route of an ongoing annual Hindu pilgrimage to a mountainous shrine at an altitude of 3,000 metres (9,500 feet) and about an eight-kilometre (5-mile) trek from the village. Multiple pilgrims were also feared to be affected by the disaster. Officials said that the pilgrimage had been suspended and more rescue teams were on the way to the area to strengthen rescue and relief operations. The pilgrimage began on July 25 and was scheduled to end on September 5. The first responders to the disaster were villagers and local officials who were later joined by police and disaster management officials, as well as personnel from India's military and paramilitary forces, Mr Sharma said. Abdul Majeed Bichoo, a local resident and a social activist from a neighbouring village, said that he witnessed the bodies of eight people being pulled out from under the mud. Three horses, which were also completely buried alongside them under debris, were 'miraculously recovered alive', he said. The 75-year-old Bichoo said Chositi village had become a 'sight of complete devastation from all sides' following the disaster. Buildings damaged in flash floods caused by torrential rains are seen in a remote, mountainous village, in the Chositi area, India-controlled Kashmir (AP) 'It was heartbreaking and an unbearable sight. I have not seen this kind of destruction of life and property in my life,' he said. The devastating floods swept away the main community kitchen set up for the pilgrims as well as dozens of vehicles and motorbikes, officials said. They added that more than 200 pilgrims were in the kitchen when the tragedy struck. The flash floods also damaged and washed away many homes, clustered together in the foothills. Photos and videos circulating on social media showed extensive damage caused in the village with multiple vehicles and homes damaged. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said that 'the situation is being monitored closely' and offered his prayers to 'all those affected by the cloudburst and flooding'. 'Rescue and relief operations are underway. Every possible assistance will be provided to those in need,' he said in a social media post. Sudden, intense downpours over small areas known as cloudbursts are increasingly common in India's Himalayan regions, which are prone to flash floods and landslides. Cloudbursts have the potential to wreak havoc by causing intense flooding and landslides, impacting thousands of people in the mountainous regions. Experts say cloudbursts have increased in recent years partly because of climate change, while damage from the storms also has increased because of unplanned development in mountain regions. Kishtwar is home to multiple hydroelectric power projects, which experts have long warned pose a threat to the region's fragile ecosystem.