Officials said on Wednesday that intense rain left at least 34 people after they criticized parts of Pakistan and India and caused floods and landslides in Kashmir, which is controlled by Indian.
More than 200,000 people were displaced in Pakistan, and the mausoleum of the founder of Sikh’s religion, one of the most visited shrines in northern India.
The predictors say the rain will continue all over the region this week. The heavy rains and sudden floods in the Himalayan area killed nearly 100 people in August.
Part of a mountain in the Jamo area in the Indian -controlled area collapsed on the famous Hindu Hajj road after heavy rains in the Katra area late on Tuesday. The officials said the worshipers were wandering to reach the hill temple.
The bodies of most of the pilgrims were recovered from under the wreckage, according to disaster management official, Mohamed Irhad, who said that at least 18 other people were injured and transferred to hospitals.
Irssad said that the rescue teams wandered in the area on Wednesday because of the people missing, and the pilgrimage was suspended to the shrine.

On Wednesday, the authorities in the Eastern Punjab Province called on the army to help the rescue and relief efforts after the heavy rains caused the inflation of the main rivers, the villages flooded and the displacement of more than 200,000 people, according to the states, Lothanant Inam Haider, head of the National Disaster Management Authority.
The spokesman for the Lieutenant -General Ahmed Sharif said that two soldiers were killed while helping the flood victims. He did not give more details.
The floods also flooded the Guru Nanak mausoleum, founder of the Dean Dean, which is located near the Indian border in the Narwal region.
Rescuers evacuated more than 20,000 people overnight from the outskirts of Lahore, the second largest city in Pakistan, which faced the danger of floods. Erfan Ali Kataya, General Manager of the Disaster Management Authority in Punjab, said that those who were evacuated were living along the Rafi River bed.

The mass evacuations started earlier this week in six areas of Punjab after the heavier monsoons of the abnormal rain and the release of water from the fake dams in neighboring India, which led to low border pods.
Cathaya warned of the flood water in the Ravi, Chinab and Sotleg rivers rising dangerously, and many villages were mired in Casore, Awkara, Bhalalagar, Bahwal Albour, Baraari and Salkut.
India has alerted Pakistan on possible floods across the border across diplomatic channels instead of the Waters Indus Committee, a permanent mechanism under the 1960 Water Treaty. New Delhi suspended the work of the committee after the killing of 26 tourists in April in an Indian Kashmir, although Pakistan insists that India cannot cancel the treaty unilaterally.
Rescuers with SNIFFer dogs continue to search for more than 150 people who have been lost this month after the floods have killed more than 300 people in three villages in the Boner region in northwestern Pakistan.
Floods have killed more than 800 people in Pakistan since late June.
Scientists say that climate change provides heavier seasonal rains in South Asia, raising fears of the repetition of the 2022 weather disaster that struck a third of Pakistan and killed 1739 people.

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