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The two buses carrying 54 passengers went missing in the Trishuli River in the landslides at the Simaltal area along the Narayanghat-Mugling road in Chitwan district.
Earlier, it was reported that there were more than 60 people on board the two buses.
The Nepali Army, Nepal Police and armed police personnel along with deep divers are being mobilised to resume the search operation, according to the Nepal Police.
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Three passengers swam to safety while 51 are still missing and there is no information about their whereabouts, said Nepal Police spokesperson Dan Bahadur Karki.
More than 500 security personnel are involved in the search operations, according to the police official.
The search operation was stopped on Friday evening as it was not possible to work during the night with high water current coupled with muddy water, the police official said.
The search operation resumed at 8 am Saturday.
“All possible locations will be searched and we will put all our best efforts into search and rescue, “he said.
Nepal is one of the world’s most vulnerable countries to the climate crisis and has witnessed multiple extreme weather events over the past decade and a half.
Evidence suggests that maximum temperatures in Nepal are rising faster, at 0.056 degrees Celsius a year, compared to the global average rise of 0.03 degrees Celsius a year, The Kathmandu Post reported.
Experts say extreme weather events—excessive rainfall in a short period, continuous rains for several days after the monsoon, dry spells, droughts, below-average precipitation, and above-normal winter temperatures—have become more frequent in Nepal.
The National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Authority estimates that 1.81 million people and 412,000 households will be affected by monsoon this year. Of them, 83,000 households will be directly impacted, and 18,000 families will require rescue due to monsoon-related disasters.