Singapore: More than 1000 people are dead across Asia after the latest extreme weather events to hit the region, with hundreds more missing following floods, cyclones and landslides that devastated Indonesia and Sri Lanka over the past week.

At least 502 people have died on the Indonesian island of Sumatra since Tuesday after a rare cyclone, called Typhoon Senyar, formed over the Malacca Strait and hit Aceh province hard, dumping torrential rain and triggering landslides.

Rescuers carry the body of a flood victim, in Agam, West Sumatra, Indonesia, on Sunday.Credit: AP

Another 508 people across the provinces of Aceh, West Sumatra and North Sumatra remained missing, the National Disaster Management Agency said.

More than 2000 kilometres away, in Sri Lanka, the death toll from Cyclone Ditwah has passed 350, according to local media reports. That storm made landfall on Thursday. Nearly a million people have been affected by heavy rains and floods, forcing about 200,000 into shelters.

The death toll in Sri Lanka is also expected to rise as rescuers search through destroyed villages for at least 360 people still missing.

The catastrophes still unfolding in Indonesia and Sri Lanka follow record-breaking rain in southern Thailand late last month that killed at least 160 people and which has been described by authorities there as a one-in-300-year event.

Earlier in November, Typhoon Kalmaegi killed at least 200 people in the Philippines and was one of several storms to also hit Vietnam, where at least 90 people, mostly in the central regions, were killed in flooding.

The north-east monsoon season, typically from November to February, corresponds with wetter months in the southern portion of South-East Asia.

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