This is the horrific moment a mother and child drowned when a bridge collapsed in floods which have claimed the lives of more than 150 people in India.
Desperate families were fleeing to the safety of neighbouring villages after their homes were taken over by floodwater in the Araria district of the Indian state of Bihar.
A single bridge provided the only route across the overflowing river Kosi, and locals were forced to run across, despite the river undercutting its foundations.
Chilling footage captured the tragic moment the bridge gave way just as a husband, wife and their child tried to run to safety and they plummeted into the waters below yesterday.
Tragic: The desperate family (pictured right) had been forced to run across a collapsing bridge to cross the overflowing river Kosi in the Araria district of the Indian state of Bihar
Deadly: Heavy monsoon rains in Nepal, Bangladesh and India have killed more than 343 people, officials and aid workers said
An onlooker said: ‘People were fleeing to safer places as rain water drowned their houses. They are at a loss as to what to take and what to leave behind.
‘The bridge connects two villages. Several people were furtively crossing the bridge over the angry river but it did not stay resilient for long and gave way just when the woman was attempting to cross it.
‘Bystanders helplessly watch as three of them got washed away with the flood waters.’
Desperate: This bridge provided the only route across the overflowing river Kosi, and locals were forced to run across, despite the river undercutting its foundations. Chilling footage captured the moment the bridge gave way as a husband, wife and child tried to run to safety
An onlooker said: ‘People were fleeing to safer places as rain water drowned their houses. Bystanders helplessly watch as three of them got washed away with the flood waters’
Horrific: The mother and daughter drowned when they were pulled into the raging torrent
Heavy monsoon rains in Nepal, Bangladesh and India have killed more than 343 people, officials and aid workers said.
More than 16million people have been affected by the floods in South Asia, with heavy rains and damaged roads hampering relief efforts amid severe food shortages and a growing risk of waterborne diseases.
Martin Faller, deputy regional director for Asia Pacific at the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, said: ‘This is fast becoming one of the most serious humanitarian crises this region has seen in many years.
‘Millions of people face severe food shortages and disease. We fear (it) will get worse in the days and weeks ahead.’
Heavy monsoon rains have unleashed landslides and floods that killed hundreds of people in recent days and displaced millions more across northern India, southern Nepal and Bangladesh. Pictured here is the scene of devastation in Gauhati