Summary Flood waters swept an overcrowded bus carrying people into a gorge in Indian-held Kashmir.
SRINAGAR (AFP) - Flood waters swept an overcrowded bus carrying a wedding party into a gorge on Thursday with all but six of the 50 on board feared dead in Indian-held Kashmir, officials said.
Rescue teams have been deployed to the flooded gorge south of Kashmir's main city of Srinagar but they have so far been unable to reach the bus, police said.
"Six passengers managed to swim to safety and they were rescued from the gorge," director general of police, Rajendra Kumar told AFP.
Heavy rains that have hit the region in the last 24 hours and strong gushing waters in the deep gorge have hampered attempts to search for any survivors, police said.
"We are using everything at our disposal in the rescue effort, and a crane is in place for pulling the bus out of the river," Kumar said declining to confirm the number of dead.
A column of army were also drawn into the rescue effort as fresh landslides in the area made access to the accident site difficult.
"Airforce rescue helicopters are also ready, but heavy rains and a strong current in the stream make it difficult," police inspector general, Rajesh Kumar said.
Flooding has hit hundreds of villages across the picturesque Kashmir Valley in the country's north, leaving at least 16 people dead, and forcing the closure of schools and some roads, authorities said.
The bride and groom were among those travelling on the bus when the accident happened, according to the Press Trust of India, although this could not be confirmed.
The passengers were heading to a wedding in the Rajouri district, 350 kilometres (220 miles) south of Srinagar, state government official Shantmanu, who uses only one name, said.
"Witnesses said 50 to 60 people were in the bus when it fell into a gorge after it was swept away by flood waters," divisional commissioner Shantmanu told AFP.
Authorities called the flooding the worst in several decades and advised tens of thousands living along the banks of the state's Jhelum river and other major waterways to leave their houses and move to safer places.
