Flooding in northern Bangladesh displaces 40,000 people, shuts schools
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The local meteorological office has forecast more rain for the central and southern regions.
PHOTO: AFP
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DHAKA - Flooding in Bangladesh has swept away homes and shut schools, displacing tens of thousands of people, the Disaster and Relief Ministry said on July 9, and the situation is expected to worsen with more heavy rain forecast over the next few days.
Some 40,000 people are taking refuge at government shelters and more than 600 medical teams have been formed to treat flood victims, the ministry said.
TV footage showed inundated roads, broken bridges and villagers wading through knee-deep water. Farmers had to rescue cattle from the gushing waters.
“Bangladeshis are used to flooding, but the water is coming up so high and so quickly in low-lying areas that people are being forced to shelter on anything, even rafts made of banana trees,” said Mr Liakath Ali, head of the climate change programme at development agency Brac.
More rain has been forecast for the central and southern regions, but the swollen Brahmaputra River is expected to recede in the next few days.
“Heavy rain in the Indian upstream region means the suffering is far from over. We have taken measures to cope with the situation,” said Mr Rezwanul Rahman, the head of Bangladesh’s disaster management department.
Seasonal monsoon rains, which start at the end of May, have triggered widespread flooding in India and neighbouring Bangladesh in recent years.
Flood waters have started receding in India’s Assam, located north of Bangladesh, the authorities said, bringing some respite to the 48,000 or so people sheltering in camps. In the last 24 hours, six people died due to rain and flood-related incidents, raising the death toll to 72 in the state since May.
More than two million people have been affected by the floods in Assam. The Kaziranga National Park, home to the rare one-horned rhinoceros, was also inundated.
A heavy downpour early on July 9 in the National Capital Region of Delhi and its suburbs disrupted traffic, and just over a week ago, unusually heavy rain in the capital New Delhi caused a roof at the airport terminal to collapse.
This week, heavy rain flooded roads and railway lines in the financial capital Mumbai, disrupting flights and forcing schools to close. REUTERS


