SRINAGAR/NEW DELHI (Agencies) - India has sought help from Pakistan to trace scores of its soldiers it fears might have swept away across the Line of Control into Pakistan Occupied Kashmir in Fridays devastating flash floods in Ladakh region. Soldiers were on guard along the LoC when the calamity struck Friday night. Official sources said at least 33 soldiers are missing from Turtuk situated on the banks of River Shyok, which meanders into Pakistan Occupied Kashmir, KONS reported Monday. These soldiers, including three officers of the 15 Bihar infantry were in a post barely 150 meters from the LOC, reports said. Officials earlier dismissed the possibility saying the soldiers were well-trained to negotiate the conditions, but the Army has not been able to trace them even 48 hours after the incident raising fears that they might have been carried away by currents into other side of Line of Control. The Army fears that the river which has narrow gorges and is strewn with boulders will be tough to negotiate even for the highly skilled and trained soldiers. These are areas where the mountains are 15,000 feet to 18,000 feet high and this is where the two armies fought a bloody battle in 1999. Meanwhile, frantic rescue efforts are underway in Leh and parts of Ladakh after devastating cloudburst that flattened villages, snapped power and communication links and left hundreds of people dead. According to latest estimates, bodies of over 150 people have been retrieved so far and around 400 people are still missing. More than 1,000 people have been injured. Rescue personnel are working round the clock, struggling through piles of slush and mud. The Leh airport has been cleaned up and flights are operating. Nine Air Force planes have landed in the area to assist in rescue efforts.