June
27, 2012 – BANGLEDESH- Landslides
and flooding caused by heavy monsoon rains have killed at least 100
people in southern Bangladesh and many more are missing, the
government said Wednesday.
Officials said the landslides occurred
mainly in remote villages with poor roads, making rescue work more
difficult.
At least 37 died in Cox’s Bazar, 33 in neighboring
Bandarban and another 21 in Chittagong, mostly in a series of
landslides, the Disaster Management Ministry said. It said soldiers
were joining the search for the missing.
Three days of pounding
torrential rain in the region of small hills and forests dislodged
huge chunks of earth which buried flimsy huts where families were
sleeping late Tuesday and early Wednesday.
Many homeless people live
at the foot of the hills or in close proximity to them despite
warnings from authorities.
Many of the dead were women and children,
officials said. In Bandarban an 11-year-old boy was the only member
of his family to survive because he was away when mud buried his hut.
His parents and three siblings perished.
Monsoon floods are common in
Bangladesh, a delta nation of 160 million people.
Volunteers using
loudspeakers warned people about the danger of landslides during the
rains, said Jaynul Bari, a government administrator.
The floods
inundated dozens of villages and were disrupting communications in
the region. Flood waters covered many roads and washed away a railway
bridge, snapping road and rail links between Dhaka and the three
districts.
An airport in Chittagong was closed after floodwaters
swamped its runway, but reopened Wednesday after the rains stopped,
officials said.
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