An aerial view of the Himalayan Mountains. A snowstorm and avalanche in Nepal's Himalayas has killed 17 people -- nine foreigners and eight Nepalis -- on a popular hiking circuit.

AFP/Kathmandu

A snowstorm and avalanche in Nepal's Himalayas has killed 17 trekkers and guides - nine foreigners and eight Nepalis - on a popular hiking route, while more than 100 others remain out of contact, officials said on Wednesday.

Severe weather triggered by the tail end of Cyclone Hudhud, which battered neighbouring India's east coast, hit groups of trekkers and guides on the Annapurna circuit in central Nepal on Tuesday.

As the weather cleared on Wednesday in the remote Mustang and Manang districts, rescuers, trudging through waist-deep snow, found 22 stranded trekkers, an official said.

But some 168 foreign tourists were registered to hike in the districts, and authorities were now trying to track them down, an official said.

Twelve bodies, those of two Israelis, a Pole, a Vietnamese and eight Nepalese trekkers and guides, were discovered buried in the snow in Mustang, said police official Ganesh Rai who is heading the rescue effort.

"There has been heavy snowfall in the area, up to three feet (91 centimetres)," Rai said.

"We have found twelve bodies in Mustang, including four foreigners, two from Israel, one from Poland and one from Vietnam," Rai said, correcting his earlier information that two of those killed were Polish.

Rescuers, aided by a Nepal army helicopter and several others hired by trekking agencies, also found the bodies of five hikers caught in an avalanche in neighbouring Manang.

"A chopper search has located the bodies of five people, including four Canadians and an Indian, killed in an avalanche," Rai said.

In a separate incident in Manang, three yak herders were killed in another avalanche on Tuesday while grazing their animals, district official Devendra Lamichanne said.

Another said he hoped those trekkers still unaccounted for had simply been cut off by the blizzard and poor telecommunications.

"The phone network is not very good so we have not been able to get in touch with the missing, but we hope to find them later today," said Mustang district official Baburam Bhandari.

Injured victims found were taken to local hospitals for treatment with a few with minor injuries airlifted to Kathmandu. Details of those rescued, including their nationalities, were not known.  

In a separate incident, rescuers are searching for a 67-year-old Frenchman who fell into a river on Tuesday while following the Manaslu trekking route, police said.

In April the deadliest disaster to hit Mount Everest killed 16 people and forced an unprecedented shutdown of the world's highest peak.

The avalanche that tore through a group of sherpas - who were hauling gear up the mountain for their foreign clients before dawn - saw scores of expeditions cancelled.

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