Heavy monsoon rains have triggered flash floods across Pakistan and India, forcing mass evacuations and causing 40 deaths.

In northern India, including Punjab and Jammu and Kashmir, families were moved from low-lying areas after rivers overflowed. India’s Jammu and Udhampur saw record daily rainfalls, while a landslide on a Hindu pilgrimage route killed at least 32 people, the Times of India reported.

The Indian High Commission in Islamabad notified Pakistani authorities of rising water levels in rivers flowing across the border, according to a notification cited by the National Disaster Management Authority. Pakistan has seen seven people die and nine injured on Wednesday, according to the authority.

Flash floods and landslides have left more than 2,000 people dead across the two South Asian countries this season, with five weeks still remaining in the monsoon, which typically ends in late September. More heavy rain is forecast in coming days.

More than a hundred people have been evacuated from several riverbanks and low-lying areas in India’s Jammu and Samba. Evacuation is happening in many places because the rivers are overflowing above the danger level, Arun Gupta, a police officer in Indian Kashmir said in a video message posted by news agency ANI.

In Pakistan’s Sialkot, a manufacturing hub in Punjab province, recorded 363.5 millimeters of rain in the past 24 hours, the most in 49 years. Punjab authorities have called in the army to assist with rescue and relief. Pakistan evacuated more than 210,000 people as major cities flooded, the authority’s Chairman Inam Haider Malik said in a news briefing.

Pakistan’s meteorological department warned of intense rainfall in the next 12 to 24 hours in Lahore, Gujranwala, Gujarat and Rawalpindi divisions, as well as parts of Pakistan-administered Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan.