A helicopter crashed in a forest outside Nepal's capital Kathmandu shortly after takeoff on Wednesday, killing all five people on board.
This incident is the latest of more than a dozen air crashes in the country's mountainous region since 2000.
The helicopter, operated by Air Dynasty, crashed into a Himalayan forest in Shivapuri National Park of Nuwakot district, 57 km (35 miles) from Kathmandu, deputy Chief District Officer Krishna Prasad Humagain said.
Police spokesman Dan Bahadur Karki confirmed all four passengers were Chinese nationals, three men and one woman, while the pilot was a Nepali male.
Local residents saw a fire emanating from the forest and alerted authorities, he said.
The helicopter, which was en route to Rasuwa district from Kathmandu on Wednesday afternoon, lost contact with air traffic control three minutes after takeoff, the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal said in a statement.
More than 360 people have died in plane or helicopter crashes in Nepal in the past 24 years.
Wedged between India and China, the landlocked country is home to eight of the world's 14 highest peaks, and its planes often service small airports nestled in remote hills or near peaks blanketed in clouds.

China's Xi hails trade progress in Trump summit, sends Taiwan warning
Senior UK minister resigns, piling pressure on PM Starmer to quit
Ukraine's anti-corruption court places Zelenskyy's former chief of staff under arrest
Philippine Senate to convene as court next week for VP Duterte impeachment
Nearly 90 killed as storm lashes India's Uttar Pradesh
Russia pounds Ukraine in massive air attack
GCC interior ministers hold emergency meeting in Riyadh
Gunshots fired in standoff at Philippine Senate over ICC suspect
