CHITTAGONG, Bangladesh - Mudslides caused by monsoon rains buried bamboo and
straw shacks in shantytowns and collapsed brick houses in southeastern
Bangladesh Monday, killing at least 80 people. Another 11 died when they were
struck by lightning, rescue officials and witnesses said.
Bangladeshi people walk through flooded waters in Chittagong,
216 kilometers(135 miles) southeast of Dhaka, Monday, June 11, 2007.
[AP]
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The hilly port city of Chittagong
was hardest-hit by the heavy rains, officials said. Nearly 8 1/2 inches of rain
fell in just three hours early Monday, submerging the downtown in about 4 feet
of water, the local weather service and witnesses said. At least 67 died in the
city, and another 13 bodies were found overnight, officials said.
The lightning strikes killed 11 people in the neighboring districts of Cox's
Bazar, Noakhali and Brahmmanbaria, the food and disaster management ministry
said.
The worst-hit area was a congested shantytown in Chittagong, where large
chunks of hill collapsed and buried dozens of bamboo and straw shacks. The area
is near a military zone and army rescuers pulled out at least 35 bodies from the
debris, city official Shahidul Islam said.
Rescue operations restarted Tuesday, while authorities moved hundreds of
people in vulnerable areas to shelters in concrete school buildings, the city
official said.
"I have never seen so much water in my life," said Mofizur Rahman, 75, who
lives near the city's main hospital.
Another 15 bodies were pulled from the remnants of a hilly slum on land
belonging to Bangladesh Railways in another part of the city, said Nasir Ahmed,
a fire brigade officer. Six others died in another hillside slum near a power
station, he said, and five members of a family perished when the walls of their
brick home collapsed in heavy rain on the Chittagong University campus.
Four others, including a young mother and her toddler, were killed when their
house collapsed. A policeman was electrocuted when he stepped on a severed
electrical wire.
Emergency workers rescued more than 50 injured people across Chittagong.
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.
Flash floods and inundated roads hampered the rescue efforts and traffic in
the city of 4 million, about 130 miles southeast of the capital, Dhaka. Many
schools and businesses were forced to close for the day.
Several factories in an industrial belt around the city were also flooded,
stopping production and causing extensive damage to machinery, said M.A.
Mohiuddin, whose textile mill makes goods for export.
The city's telephone, television and radio networks were also interrupted as
transmission stations were flooded.
In neighboring Feni district, rain-swollen rivers flooded 15 farming
villages, leaving at least 55,000 people stranded, CSB television reported. No
casualties were reported in Feni, 80 miles east of Dhaka, the report said.
Heavy monsoon rains - the highest levels recorded in seven years - also
inundated parts of the capital Dhaka and other regions of the country over the
weekend.
Bangladesh, a low-lying, deeply impoverished nation of 144 million people, is
prone to seasonal floods and cyclones which kill hundreds every year.
A powerful cyclone in 1991 killed 139,000 people along the
coast.