CHITTAGONG, Bangladesh - Workers pulled mud-covered bodies from the rubble
Wednesday, as the death toll from monsoon storms rose to 126 and an overflowing
river forced several thousand villagers to flee their homes.
Bereaved Bangladeshi villagers await the arrival of rescue
workers in Chittagong, 216 kilometers (135 miles) southeast of Dhaka,
Tuesday, June 12, 2007. The death toll from a torrent of mudslides,
flooding and lightning in southeastern Bangladesh rose to 105 Tuesday
after rescuers found 14 more bodies, officials and witnesses said.
[AP] |
Eighteen more bodies were found in
the worst-hit city of Chittagong, most of them children and women, city official
Nur Sulaiman said.
Many parts of the city of 4 million remained without power or water because
of flooding. Several city roads remained covered in slippery sludge, residents
said.
In neighboring Comilla district, rain-swollen Gumti River breached an
embankment Wednesday, flooding dozens of villages and forcing several thousand
villagers to flee their homes, CSB television station reported.
At least 75,000 people have been marooned in Comilla, a farming district 55
miles east of capital Dhaka, the station reported. No flood-related casualties
were immediately reported.
Bangladesh, a low-lying delta nation of 150 million people, is buffeted by
floods that kill hundreds of people every year and often displace millions. The
rains - the heaviest recorded in seven years - also have inundated parts of the
capital, Dhaka, and other regions of the country.
At least 115 have perished in Chittagong, officials said Wednesday. Lightning
strikes killed 11 people Monday in the neighboring districts of Cox's Bazar,
Noakhali and Brahmmanbaria, the Flood and Disaster Management Ministry said.
Most deaths in Chittagong occurred in a shantytown where chunks of earth slid
off soaked hillsides Monday and buried dozens of crudely built shacks.
Densely populated and grindingly poor, the country is filled with slums that
are particularly vulnerable - the one hit in Chittagong was home to 700 people,
most of them migrant workers and their families, who lived in clusters of
straw-and-bamboo or mud-and-tin shanties built on the slope of hill, survivors
said.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the United Nations "stands ready to
assist as required" and extended his deepest condolences to the families of
those killed or injured, UN spokeswoman Michele Montas said at UN
headquarters in New York.
Rescue officials said authorities had moved hundreds of people in vulnerable
areas to shelters in concrete school buildings.
Government and charity agencies distributed food and water to about 1,000
people left homeless by the calamity, the area's government administrator
Mukhlesur Rahman said. Emergency workers had managed to rescue more than 50
injured people from the rubble.
Rains also caused havoc in the neighboring Indian city of Calcutta, killing
three people, bringing transport to a standstill, clogging roads, submerging
railroad tracks and delaying flights.
Three people were killed by lightning at a fish market at Kestopur, a
Calcutta suburb on Wednesday, said local police officer, B.D.
Manna.