RRaghunath - Today, I read a more informative news story on the glacier collapse and thought about my post. I'm still not sure whether I would rescind my comment about a glacier losing its grip. Most of my landslide crossings were on the ascent portion of the Annapurna circuit. My descent from Thorang-La Pass was toward Muktinath, which is drier, (mountain rain shadow effect?). Today there are four lodging options just before the pass. When I trekked the circuit, there was just one, water was rationed and tasted like diesel fuel from the drums it was stored in.
I would have to find my diary for the location but I recall on a one day stop over, on the ascent, when a group decided to hike to a lake at the base of a glacier and were rewarded with a calving. Those of us who chose to stay at our guest house and just enjoy the warmth of the sun and a languorous shower, free of a line of people waiting their turn for 5 gallons of hot water, did observe a rising telltale cloud indication as to some slide activity.
Unless there is more large glacier collapses in the near future, I'm not prepared to claim Climate Change is the cause. I'm more inclined to believe soil failure from drainage is a more frequent & thus likely cause. The Annapurna Trek ascends & descends through climate zones and while on my descent, I passed through an area where an entire village, its people and some travelers, save for a few hovels, had been wiped from existence, the previous spring by a muddy landslide.