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Cloudbursts are causing chaos in parts of India and Pakistan. Here’s what they are

Cloudbursts are causing chaos in parts of India and Pakistan. Here’s what they are
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Rescuers and local residents use heavy machinery to recover bodies during a rescue operation at the site of a massive cloudburst that led to flash flooding in Salarzai, in Bajaur district, in northwestern Pakistan, on Aug. 15, 2025. (AP Photo)
Cloudbursts are causing chaos in parts of India and Pakistan. Here’s what they are
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Residents recover belongings from the remains of a damaged home after a cloudburst triggered heavy rains and flooding in Naryan Behak village, on the outskirts of Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistani-administered Kashmir, on August 15, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Updated 18 August 2025

Cloudbursts are causing chaos in parts of India and Pakistan. Here’s what they are

Cloudbursts are causing chaos in parts of India and Pakistan. Here’s what they are
  • A cloudburst occurs when a large volume of rain falls in a very short period, usually more than 100 mm within an hour over a localized area
  • The event is the bursting of a cloud and the discharge of its contents at the same time, like a rain bomb

ISLAMABAD: Cloudbursts are causing chaos in mountainous parts of India and Pakistan, with tremendous amounts of rain falling in a short period of time over a concentrated area. The intense, sudden deluges have proved fatal in both countries.
As many as 300 people died in one northwestern Pakistani district, Buner, after a cloudburst. The strength and volume of rain triggered flash flooding, landslides and mudflows. Boulders from steep slopes came crashing down with the water to flatten homes and reduce villages to rubble.
The northern Indian state of Uttarakhand had a cloudburst earlier this month. Local TV showed floodwaters surging down a mountain and crashing into Dharali, a Himalayan village. In 2013, more than 6,000 people died and 4,500 villages were affected when a similar cloudburst struck the state.
Here’s what to know about cloudbursts:
They are complex and extreme weather events
A cloudburst occurs when a large volume of rain falls in a very short period, usually more than 100 millimeters (about 4 inches) within an hour over a localized area, around 30 square kilometers (11.6 square miles).
Cloudbursts are sudden and violent, with devastating consequences and widespread destruction, and can be the equivalent of several hours of normal rainfall or longer. The event is the bursting of a cloud and the discharge of its contents at the same time, like a rain bomb.
Several factors contribute to a cloudburst, including warm, moist air rising upward, high humidity, low pressure, instability and convective cloud formation.
Moist air is forced to rise after encountering a hill or mountain. This rising air cools and condenses. Clouds that are large, dense and capable of heavy rainfall form.
Hills or mountains act like barriers and often trap these clouds, so they cannot disperse or move easily. Strong upward currents keep moisture suspended inside the clouds, delaying rainfall.
When the clouds cannot hold the accumulated moisture anymore, they burst and release it all at once.




People carry the body of a victim of a cloudburst incident, sudden intense downpours, after funeral prayers, in Naryan Behak village near Muzaffarabad, the main town of Pakistan's controlled Kashmir, on Aug. 15, 2025. (AP Photo)

India and Pakistan have ideal conditions
Cloudbursts thrive in moisture, monsoons and mountains. Regions of India and Pakistan have all three, making them vulnerable to these extreme weather events.
The Himalayas, Karakoram and Hindu Kush mountain ranges are home to the world’s highest and most famous peaks, spanning multiple countries including India and Pakistan.
The frequency of cloudbursts in these two South Asian nations has been steadily rising due to a warming atmosphere, because a warmer air mass can hold more moisture, creating conditions for sudden and intense downpours.
The South Asian region has traditionally had two monsoon seasons. One typically lasts from June to September, with rains moving southwest to northeast. The other, from roughly October to December, moves in the opposite direction.
But with more planet-warming gases in the air, the rain now only loosely follows this pattern.
This is because the warmer air can hold more moisture from the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean, and that rain then tends to get dumped all at once. It means the monsoon is punctuated with intense flooding and dry spells, rather than sustained rain throughout.
The combination of moisture, mountains and monsoons force these moisture-laden winds upward, triggering sudden condensation and cloudbursts.
They are hard to predict, but precaution is possible
It’s difficult to predict cloudbursts because of their size, duration, suddenness and complex atmospheric mechanisms.
Asfandyar Khan Khattak, a Pakistani official from the northwest province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, said there was “no forecasting system anywhere in the world” that could predict the exact time and location of a cloudburst.

The Pakistani government said that while an early warning system was in place in Buner district, where hundreds of people died after a cloudburst, the downpour was so sudden and intense that it struck before residents could be alerted.
Community organization SOST, which is also the name of a border village in Pakistan’s northern Gilgit-Baltistan region, says precautions are possible.
It advises people to avoid building homes right next to rivers and valleys, to postpone any travel to hilly areas if heavy rain is forecast, to keep an emergency kit ready, and to avoid traveling on mountainous roads during heavy rain or at night.
It recommends afforestation to reduce surface runoff and enhance water absorption, and regular clearing and widening of riverbanks and drainage channels.
Climate change is fueling their frequency
Experts say cloudbursts have increased in recent years, partly due to climate change, while damage from associated storms has also increased due to unplanned development in mountain areas.
Climate change has directly amplified the triggers of cloudbursts in Pakistan, especially. Every 1°C rise allows the air to hold about 7 percent more moisture, increasing the potential for heavy rainfall in short bursts.
The warming of the Indian Ocean and Arabian Sea pushes more moisture into the atmosphere. Melting glaciers and snow alter local weather patterns, making rainfall events more erratic and extreme. Environmental degradation, in the form of deforestation and wetland loss, reduces the land’s ability to absorb water, magnifying flash floods.
Climate change has been a central driver in the destruction seen in Pakistan’s northern areas.
“Rising global temperatures have supercharged the hydrologic cycle, leading to more intense and erratic rainfall,” said Khalid Khan, a former special secretary for climate change in Pakistan and chairman of climate initiative PlanetPulse.
“In our northern regions, warming accelerates glacier melt, adds excessive moisture to the atmosphere, and destabilizes mountain slopes. In short, climate change is making rare events more frequent, and frequent events more destructive.”


India looks for Bahrain’s support in strengthening GCC ties

India looks for Bahrain’s support in strengthening GCC ties
Updated 59 min 31 sec ago

India looks for Bahrain’s support in strengthening GCC ties

India looks for Bahrain’s support in strengthening GCC ties
  • India has been pursuing free trade pact with GCC for past 2 decades
  • Bahrain will assume presidency of Supreme Council of GCC in December

NEW DELHI: Indian Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar on Monday sought Bahrain’s support in advancing India’s engagement with the Gulf Cooperation Council as he received his Bahraini counterpart, Abdullatif Al-Zayani, in New Delhi.

Al-Zayani arrived in India on Sunday to co-chair with Jaishankar the fifth session of the India-Bahrain High Joint Commission, which was established in 2018 as the top institutional mechanism to strengthen bilateral relations.

“Since our last HJC meeting we have made significant progress bilaterally in defense, security, trade and commerce, health, culture and people-to-people ties. But there are new areas such as space, fintech and technology that hold considerable promise for our partnership,” Jaishankar told Al-Zayani in his opening remarks.

“We look forward to your support for further intensifying India-GCC cooperation,” Jaishankar said.

India has been pursuing a free trade pact with the GCC for the past two decades. A Framework Agreement on Economic Cooperation was signed in 2004 but two rounds of negotiations — in 2006 and 2008 — were inconclusive.

The GCC’s secretary-general announced at the beginning of 2025 that the bloc was set to start free trade negotiations with India this year.

The agreement would give India access to a large and affluent market for its goods and also concessions on visas in a region which is second home to some 9 million Indian expat workers.

Bahrain will host and assume the presidency of the Supreme Council of the GCC at the upcoming summit in Manama next month. The presidency gives it a platform to highlight collective GCC responses and cooperation mechanisms.

“We aspire to enhance greater connectivity between India and our broader region,” Al-Zayani said during the meeting with Jaishankar.

“In alignment with the high-level commitment from our leadership to this significant partnership, I would like to emphasize Bahrain’s dedication to deepening our relationship with the Republic of India.”

In a statement after the HJC meeting, the Indian Ministry of External Affairs said it had discussed efforts to strengthen cooperation in the fields of healthcare, including in health services, medical care, clinical research, pharmaceuticals and medical devices.

During the commission’s previous meeting in Manama last year, India and Bahrain agreed to broaden cooperation in the education sector, with the Indian side inviting more Bahraini students to pursue higher studies at the country’s top institutions.

Nearly 332,000 Indian nationals live in Bahrain, making up almost a quarter of the country’s 1.5 million population.


Hegseth visits DMZ ahead of talks on US troops in South Korea

Hegseth visits DMZ ahead of talks on US troops in South Korea
Updated 03 November 2025

Hegseth visits DMZ ahead of talks on US troops in South Korea

Hegseth visits DMZ ahead of talks on US troops in South Korea
  • DMZ visit comes ahead of talks expected to involve Washington’s goal of reshaping the role of US troops in Korea

SEOUL: US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth visited the Demilitarized Zone along the border with North Korea as part of a trip to South Korea on Monday, South Korea’s defense ministry said.
His visit to the heavily fortified DMZ came ahead of talks expected to involve Washington’s goal of reshaping the role of US troops in Korea.
Hegseth landed in the border area in a US army helicopter and met South Korean Defense Minister Ahn Gyu-back, according to video footage released by the South Korean defense ministry.
“I believe it has symbolic and declarative significance itself, demonstrating the strength of the South Korea-US alliance and the combined defense posture,” Ahn said of Hegseth’s visit to the DMZ.
The defense chiefs are scheduled to hold the annual Security Consultative Meeting on Tuesday, the highest-level forum at which the two countries chart the course of their military alliance and South Korea’s defense against nuclear-armed North Korea.
Ahn and Hegseth would discuss combined defense readiness against North Korea and cooperation on regional security and cyber and missile defense, the South’s Defense Ministry said.
The two are expected to discuss plans to respond to the “changing security environment and threats” by developing the alliance between the two countries, it said.
Washington is considering making the role of the 28,500 US troops in South Korea more flexible, with an eye on maintaining the balance of power in Asia amid concerns about Chinese activities in the South China Sea and around Taiwan.
US officials have signaled a plan to make US forces more flexible to potentially operate outside the Korean peninsula in response to a broader range of threats, such as defending Taiwan and checking China’s growing military reach.
South Korea has resisted the idea of shifting the role of US troops, but has worked to grow its defense capabilities in the past 20 years, with the goal of being able to take on a wartime command of the combined US-South Korean forces. South Korea has 450,000 troops.
South Korea to increase defense budget
South Korea plans the largest defense budget increase in years in 2026, partly to address US President Donald Trump’s demand that Washington’s allies pay more for the US military presence in their countries.
Hegseth visited the Panmunjom truce village on the Demilitarized Zone border with North Korea, accompanied by South Korea’s Ahn, according to the South Korean defense ministry.
On Monday, the top military officials of the two countries held their annual meeting on strategic and operational directions for the combined forces and shared the view that the regional security environment was “complex and unstable.”
The two chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff pledged cooperation with other allies and partners to maintain the security of the Indo-Pacific and deter potential threats, South Korea’s Defense Ministry said in a statement.
Nuclear-armed North Korea has ignored overtures from Trump and South Korean President Lee Jae Myung for dialogue and has dramatically advanced its missile and conventional military capabilities.


Tanzania president inaugurated as opposition says hundreds dead

Tanzania president inaugurated as opposition says hundreds dead
Updated 03 November 2025

Tanzania president inaugurated as opposition says hundreds dead

Tanzania president inaugurated as opposition says hundreds dead
  • Tanzania’s Samia Suluhu Hassan was inaugurated as president on Monday, with an Internet blackout still in place after election protests in which the opposition says hundreds were killed by security

NAIROBI: Tanzania’s Samia Suluhu Hassan was inaugurated as president on Monday, with an Internet blackout still in place after election protests in which the opposition says hundreds were killed by security forces.
The electoral commission said Hassan won 98 percent of the vote.
She was sworn into office despite the main opposition party, Chadema, which was barred from running, rejecting the results. It has called for fresh elections, saying last Wednesday’s vote was a “sham.”
Ahead of her arrival, state television showed officials and foreign dignitaries in stands overlooking parade grounds in State House in the capital Dodoma, rather than at a stadium as usual. Earlier, the broadcaster said the public would not attend.
A total Internet blackout has been in place since protests broke out on election day, so only a trickle of verifiable information has been getting out of the east African country.
A diplomatic source said there were credible reports of hundreds — perhaps even thousands — of deaths registered at hospitals and health clinics around Tanzania.
Chadema told AFP it had recorded “no less than 800” deaths by Saturday, but none of the figures could be independently verified.
The government has not commented on any deaths, except to reject accusations that “excessive force” was used.
Schools and colleges remained closed on Monday, with public transport halted and reports of some church services not taking place on Sunday.
The diplomatic source said there were “concerning reports” that police were using the Internet blackout to buy time as they “hunt down opposition members and protesters who might have videos” of atrocities committed last week.
Dar es Salaam and other cities were much calmer over the weekend as a near-total lockdown was in place.
An AFP reporter said police were stopping almost everyone that moved around the city, checking IDs and bags, and allowing shops to open only in the afternoon.
AFP journalists on the island of Zanzibar, which has greater political freedom and had few protests, saw masked armed men patrolling without visible insignia or identification in the days after the election.
A rights group in neighboring Kenya presented footage on Sunday that it said was gathered from inside Tanzania, including images of dead bodies piled up in the street.
The images could not be independently verified.
Pope Leo XIV on Sunday called for prayers for Tanzania where he said post-election violence had erupted “with numerous victims.”
“I urge everyone to avoid all forms of violence and to pursue the path of dialogue,” the pope said.
’Wave of terror’
Hassan was elevated from vice president on the sudden death of her predecessor, John Magufuli, in 2021.
She wanted an emphatic election victory to cement her place and silence critics within the ruling party, analysts say.
Rights groups say she oversaw a “wave of terror” ahead of the vote, including a string of high-profile abductions that escalated in the final days.
Despite a heavy security presence, election day descended into chaos as crowds took to the streets across the country, tearing down her posters and attacking police and polling stations, leading to an Internet shutdown and curfew.
Polling stations had been largely empty before the violence broke out, AFP journalists and observers saw, though the electoral commission later said turnout was 87 percent.
UN chief Antonio Guterres was “deeply concerned” about the situation in Tanzania, “including reports of deaths and injuries during the demonstrations,” his spokesman said last week.
The international reaction has been muted. However, Kenyan President William Ruto congratulated her and called for people to “uphold peace and the rule of law.” The Democratic Republic of Congo leader, Felix Tshisekedi, also congratuled Hassan on her “brilliant re-election.”


UK police charge man with attempted murder over train stabbing that wounded 11 people

UK police charge man with attempted murder over train stabbing that wounded 11 people
Updated 03 November 2025

UK police charge man with attempted murder over train stabbing that wounded 11 people

UK police charge man with attempted murder over train stabbing that wounded 11 people
  • The minutes-long stabbing spree spread fear and panic through a train bound for London on Saturday
  • Suspect was arrested when the train made an emergency stop in the town of Huntingdon

LONDON: UK police on Monday charged a 32-year-old man with attempted murder over a stabbing attack on train that wounded 11 people.
British Transport Police said Anthony Williams is charged with multiple counts of attempted murder as well as actual bodily harm and possession of a bladed article.
The minutes-long stabbing spree spread fear and panic through a train bound for London on Saturday. The suspect was arrested when the train made an emergency stop in the town of Huntingdon in eastern England.
Eleven people were hospitalized, and one – a member of train staff – remains in critical but stable condition.


Truck rams into bus in southern India, killing at least 20

Truck rams into bus in southern India, killing at least 20
Updated 03 November 2025

Truck rams into bus in southern India, killing at least 20

Truck rams into bus in southern India, killing at least 20
  • The state-run transport bus was carrying around 70 passengers en route to Hyderabad city
  • The front of the bus was badly mangled, trapping several passengers inside

HYDERABAD, India: A truck loaded with concrete stone chips rammed into a passenger bus in southern India early Monday, killing at least 20 people and injuring about two dozens, local authorities said.
The state-run transport bus was carrying around 70 passengers en route to Hyderabad city in southern Telangana state when a truck coming from opposite direction collided with it near the town of Chevalla, local district official K. Chandrakala told The Associated Press.
The front of the bus was badly mangled, trapping several passengers inside.
Rajendra Prasad, superintendent at Chevalla hospital said 20 bodies have been moved to the mortuary and will be handed over to their families after verification.
The accident came a day after a minibus carrying passengers in western state of Rajasthan rammed into a parked truck late Sunday, killing at least 15 people and injuring two others.
The passengers were returning to the desert city of Jodhpur after offering prayers to a Hindu deity in the pilgrimage town of Kolayat, officials said.
Among the dead were 10 women, four children, and the driver, senior government official Shweta Chauhan told The Associated Press. The injured have been admitted to a local hospital for treatment.
The victims were trapped in the mangled mass of metal that the tempo traveler minibus was reduced to after the accident, Chauhan said.
Senior police officer Kundan Kanwaria said the driver was trying to overtake another vehicle but crashed into the truck parked on the highway.
“It seems the driver couldn’t even apply the brakes before hitting the truck,” Kanwaria said.
It is not uncommon in India for vehicles, especially trucks and trailers, to be parked haphazardly along highways, often without warning lights or reflectors. Such poorly marked stops frequently pose serious risks for nighttime drivers and have led to several deadly crashes in recent years.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Telangana’s highest-elected official Revanth Reddy and Rajasthan’s BHajjan Lal Sharma, offered their condolences to the bereaved families.
The crash in Rajasthan came less than three weeks after a suspected short circuit sparked a fire on a passenger bus in the state, rapidly engulfing the vehicle in flames and burning at least 20 people to death.