Bangladesh flood death toll surpasses 100

In this photograph taken on July 25, 2019, residents travel on a makeshift raft to collect drinking water in a flood afected area following monsoon rain in Kurigram district. – At least 104 people were killed in floods in Bangladesh as the low-lying delta country is reeling from one of the worst monsoons in years, officials said on July 26. Six villages went under water in northern Mymensingh district late Wednesday after flood water breached an embankment, displacing some 2,000 people, district administrator Mizanur Rahman told AFP. (Photo by STR / AFP)

 

DHAKA, Bangladesh (AFP) — The death toll from monsoon storms in Bangladesh rose above 100 Friday with flood levels still rising in many parts of the country, officials said.

About 20 people have died in 48 hours, taking the toll to 104, making it one of the worst monsoons in years, officials said. Most victims have drowned but some have been killed by landslides, snake bites and lightning strikes.

Five girls aged between six and 18 drowned when their boat capsized in a flood torrent in the northern district of Jamalpur on Thursday, district administrator Ahmed Kabir told AFP.

The Brahmaputra river, which flows out of the Himalayas, has risen dramatically since July 10 leaving 1.2 million people in Jamalpur without homes or affected by the floods.

The river last week was at its highest level since authorities started keeping records in 1975.

Six villages in Mymensingh district were flooded after waters breached an embankment and forced 2,000 people to flee their homes, district administrator Mizanur Rahman said.

Five million people have been affected by the floods since July 10, according to authorities. Several hundred thousand have been forced out of their homes.

The state-run Flood Forecasting and Warning Centre said at least 26 of the country’s 64 districts — covering a third of the country — have been flooded by heavy monsoon rains and a deluge from Himalayan rivers in India and Nepal.

The centre said floods would remain high in many districts up to Saturday. Floods were receding in other districts however, the centre head Arifuzzaman Bhuyan told AFP.

Bangladesh is regularly flooded during the June-September monsoon as hundreds of rivers that feed into the Bay of Bengal burst their banks.

 

© Agence France-Presse