Scientists warn climate change making Southeast Asia’s rainy season increasingly hazardous.

At least 18 people have been killed in Indonesia over the past week, authorities said on Monday. In Vietnam, six people were killed late on Sunday when a bus was swept off a road in the centre of the country.
The deaths in Indonesia happened in two regions in Central Java province.
A landslide in the city of Cilacap buried a dozen houses in Cibeunying village, the disaster mitigation agency said.
Search and rescue efforts have been challenging, it noted, with victims buried in mud 3m to 8m (10ft to 25ft) deep.
Authorities have counted at least 16 people killed while another seven are missing, said M Abdullah, head of the local division of the search and rescue agency.
Excavators were deployed to dig through dirt, footage from news channel KompasTV showed on Monday.
Separately, two people died and 27 were missing after a landslide on Saturday in the region of Banjarnegara, the disaster mitigation agency said, with up to 30 houses damaged.
Increasingly destructive and frequent
In Vietnam, a landslide buried a passenger bus on a treacherous mountain pass. Six people are reported to have been killed with 19 injured, according to state media.
The bus carrying 32 people was en route from Da Lat to Nha Trang when the incident happened, reports said.

