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More Heavy Rains Expected To Worsen Bangladesh And Northeast India’s Most Severe Floods In Years

Breaking Business More Heavy Rains Expected To Worsen Bangladesh And Northeast India’s Most Severe Floods In Years Siladitya Ray Forbes Staff Covering breaking news and tech policy stories at Forbes. New! Follow this author to improve your content experience. Got it! Jun 20, 2022, 06:54am EDT | Updated Jun 20, 2022, 07:02am EDT Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Share to Linkedin Topline Weather officials warned of more heavy rains in Bangladesh and Northeast India over the next 24 hours as the death toll in the region from landslides, lightning strikes and the worst floods seen in years continued to rise, while millions of people remained trapped by flood waters without access to relief and rescue.

A man carries his livestock as he wades through flood waters in Solmara of Nalbari district, in . . .

[+] India’s Assam state. AFP via Getty Images Key Facts In Bangladesh, the national meteorological department predicted “moderately heavy to very heavy” rain in parts of the country and warned that this may lead to landslides in the eastern regions of Chittagong and Sylhet, Bangla daily Prothom Alo reported . According to Reuters, lightning and landslides caused by the monsoon rains claimed at least 25 lives in Bangladesh over the weekend.

In Sylhet, Bangladesh’s worst-hit province, some 300,000 people have been relocated to government shelters but more than four million remain trapped near their homes by flood water without access to critical relief supplies. In the northeast Indian state of Assam—which borders Bangladesh—the Indian Meteorological Department issued an ‘Orange Alert’ on Monday urging people in the region to be prepared for “heavy to… extremely heavy rainfall. ” Assam’s death toll from the severe rains stands at 71 with at least eight others reported missing, according to India Today .

According to the Assam State Disaster Management Authority, more than 4. 2 million people in the state were affected by the flooding as of Sunday, only around 190,000 of whom have managed to make it to government relief camps. Big Number 12,000.

That is the total number of households in the port city of Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh that are currently facing the risk of landslides caused by heavy rains, Prothom Alo reported . Key Background Heavy rains and flooding during the monsoon season are a regular occurrence in the region, but the ongoing floods in Sylhet and Assam are among the worst that the region has seen in more than a decade. The low-lying region in Bangladesh and Eastern India is home to the Ganges delta—the world’s largest river delta—which flows from the Himalayas into the Bay of Bengal.

Extreme weather events in the region have been attributed to climate change, with several experts warning that the rapid melting of glaciers in the Himalayas could lead to more catastrophic flooding and affect more than 100 million people. Aside from floods, the region has been hit by multiple tropical cyclones in the past few years resulting in hundreds of fatalities. People wade on chest-deep flood waters after collecting food aid in a flooded residential area .

. . [+] following heavy monsoon rainfalls in Companiganj.

AFP via Getty Images A family collects their goods before leaving their submerged home after flash floods at Goainghat . . .

[+] sub-distric in Sylhet, Bangladesh. NurPhoto via Getty Images People are seen on a boat after flash floods as a damaged house is seen behind at Goainghat . .

. [+] sub-district in Sylhet, Bangladesh. NurPhoto via Getty Images Flood affected people coming towards a safer place using a banana raft, at a village in Barpeta, .

. . [+] India.

Anadolu Agency via Getty Images A man pushes his cart through flood waters in Sylhet, Bangladesh. ASSOCIATED PRESS Further Reading Dozens killed and millions stranded by India and Bangladesh floods (BBC) Millions in Bangladesh and India await relief after deadly flooding (Reuters) Follow me on Twitter . Send me a secure tip .

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From: forbes
URL: https://www.forbes.com/sites/siladityaray/2022/06/20/more-heavy-rains-expected-to-worsen-bangladesh-and-northeast-indias-most-severe-floods-in-years/

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