At least 14 people, including several children, were killed in heavy rainfall across South Asian countries.
In the eastern suburbs of India's Mumbai, at least six people were killed when a group of buildings collapsed on Sunday, the latest casualties of heavy rains that have disrupted travel and shut down schools in the city.
Rains also triggered landslides on the expressway connecting Mumbai with Pune, forcing its closure and disrupting traffic between the two cities.
Television images showed broken slabs of construction rubble on the road, while rainwater fell from the roof of a tunnel.
Besides road transport, flights were disrupted and long-distance train services, including those running between Mumbai and Pune, were also canceled.
Local media showed residents trudging through waterlogged lanes, as schools and colleges were shut on Monday.
Heavy rains have also led trees to collapse on Mumbai roads, killing at least three people since late last month, local media say.
The city, the financial capital of India, received more than 100mm (3.9 inches) of rainfall, with some regions receiving as much as 161mm (6.3 inches) of rain.
India's weather office has predicted "a spell of very light to light rain" for Monday across many places in the national capital region.
Eight killed in landslides at Rohingya refugee camps in Bangladesh
In southeastern Bangladesh, officials said that at least eight Rohingya Muslims, including some children, were killed and several others injured early on Monday after heavy monsoon rains triggered multiple landslides at refugee camps.
The landslides hit four locations across the camps, burying shelters under mud and debris while residents were asleep. A Bangladeshi man was killed, and two family members were injured when part of a hillside collapsed onto their house in Cox's Bazar, police said.
Tumpa Das, a police official in Cox’s Bazar, said continued rainfall had increased the risk of further landslides, with thousands of refugees still living on unstable slopes.
"We’re moving people out of high-risk areas as quickly as possible to prevent any more casualties,” said Mohammed Mizanur Rahman, the Bangladeshi official tasked with refugee relief and repatriation.
The Bangladesh Meteorological Department has forecast more heavy rain in the coming days, prompting authorities to remain on alert for additional landslides and flash floods.
Landslides and flooding are common during the monsoon season in the refugee camps, often killing people and damaging homes, roads and other facilities.
China's Nanning on top alert as Typhoon Maysak triggers reservoir breach
Nanning, capital of China's southwestern Guangxi region, raised its flood-control response to the highest level as rivers and reservoirs swelled with the passage of Typhoon Maysak, Chinese state media reported on Monday.
Authorities in Nanning, a city of nearly 9 million people, raised the flood-control emergency response level from III to I due to "extremely heavy rain," China Central Television (CCTV) reported.
So far, one breach has been reported at a medium-sized reservoir in Nanning's Hengzhou, and people in the area were being evacuated, state-run Xinhua news agency reported, citing local authorities.
Maysak made landfall in the southern island province of Hainan on Friday, the first tropical cyclone to reach the Chinese mainland this year. The storm made its second landfall on Sunday in Vietnam, which borders Guangxi.
Maysak is expected to weaken further as it moves inland, but remnants of the storm and seasonal southwestern rains will continue to bring heavy rainfall to Guangxi, Guizhou, Hunan, and other areas, according to Chinese meteorologists.