Chittagong, Bangladesh - The death toll from landslides and
flash floods which were touched off by heavy rains reached 110 in the
Bangladesh port city of Chittagong on Wednesday as an army-led search
and rescue operation went on for the fourth consecutive day,
officials said.
Civil defence volunteers dug out the rotting remains of at least a
dozen victims, raising the overnight number of the dead from 98 to
110 in the worst natural disaster to hit the poor country this year.
About a score of people were on the list of the missing while
nearly 300 others were being treated in hospitals for injuries.
Rescuers claimed the casualties were from huge chunks of earth and
stones, which were loosened in the showers, rumbling down the hills
and smashing the shanties below.
'There may be still a few people trapped under the debris of
crushed homes and mudslides but chances of finding any of them alive
are very slim,' divisional commissioner Mokhlesur Rahman said.
Rahman, however, said that no efforts would be spared to recover
all the bodies buried under tons of mud at the foot of the low
altitude hills that dot the landscape of Chittagong, the country's
main port city.
The military-backed interim government in the country, rocked by
political turmoil, recently declared the port city a disaster zone,
mobilizing thousands of soldiers, paramilitary police and civilian
volunteers to help the survivors rebuild their lives.
Ports have resumed limited operation after two days of closure due
to thunder storms battering the Bay of Bengal coast.
Officials said the rain-swept port city was under knee-deep water
in many parts while emergency workers used boats as transports.
Chittagong is located 275 kilometres south of the capital Dhaka.
'It is a national emergency and we must unite the nation to face
the calamity,' said Fakhruddin Ahmed, the executive head of the
caretaker regime.
Ahmed flew into the port city overnight to personally monitor the
rescue operation and the distribution of relief materials among the
people who survived the ordeal but were injured and made homeless.
The active monsoon dumped heavy rains in five north-eastern
districts in the Sylhet region, triggering flash floods making about
60,000 people homeless, disaster management officials said.
The seasonal rains swelled the rivers Surma and Khowai,
threatening the existence of scores of villages along the fragile
coastline.
© 2007 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur
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