Bangladesh Flood situation (2024)

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Feni, BangladeshCNN —
Wading through muddy floodwaters up to chest height, hundreds of people slowly make their way to safety, their belongings held high above their heads to keep them dry.

Entering the city of Feni in southeast Bangladesh, it becomes clear why it is described as the epicenter of one of the country’s worst floods in living memory. Since Wednesday night, water has inundated 11 districts, and large swathes of the city of nearly 1.5 million people are now submerged.

Bangladesh lives on its rivers and waterways — its people relying on the vital life source for fishing and farming rice paddies. The country is also well-acquainted with flooding and cyclones — especially in recent years, as scientists say human-caused climate change exacerbates extreme weather events.

But this flood took them by surprise – and people here blame officials in India.

Dozens of people CNN met in Feni – which is only a few miles from the India border – accused New Delhi of releasing water from the Dumbur dam in neighboring Tripura state with no warning.

As we waded past their homes, some people shouted, “We hate India” and “This is Indian water.”

“They opened the gate, but no information was given,” said Shoriful Islam, 29, an IT worker who returned to his hometown from the capital Dhaka to volunteer in rescue efforts.

India denied the dam release was deliberate and said excessive rain was a factor – although it conceded that a power outage and communications breakdown meant they failed to issue the usual warning to neighbors downstream.

“India used a water weapon,” Islam said. “India is taking revenge for destroying the last government.”

‘I don’t know if they’re alive’​

CNN joined two missions run by volunteers to provide relief supplies and rescue vulnerable people in Feni.

The only way in or out of the flood zone is by boat – all the main roads are completely cut off to vehicles, and rescue efforts are being slowed by the lack of electricity and near-total communications blackout in the city.

The army and navy have been mobilized to coordinate relief operations – and a nationwide volunteering effort has sprung up in the past few days, with people arriving from Dhaka and other parts of the country to lend a hand with rescues and delivering aid.

Some of them are also returning to their hometown to search for their family members.

Volunteer Abdus Salam, 35 – who usually works as an English teacher in Dhaka – said 12 members of his family are stranded in a rural area 15 miles (25 kilometers) from the center of Feni, including his two sisters, brother, and their children.

“I don’t know if they are alive,” he told CNN. “I’m crying lots of the time.”

“There’s no electricity, no gas, no internet,” he added, calling for the international community to send assistance.

Nearly 5 million people are impacted by the floods in Bangladesh, and at least 18 people have been killed – but there are fears that number could rise much higher as the flood waters recede.

In neighboring India, officials say at least 26 people have been killed, and more than 64,000 people are seeking shelter in relief camps in the Tripura region.

Not an ordinary flood​

Anger is now rising among the flood victims in Bangladesh about the source of the water that flooded their homes.

Pranay Verma, India’s high commissioner to Bangladesh, told Bangladesh’s interim government an “automatic release” occurred at the dam due to high water levels, according to the interim government’s press secretary, Shafiqul Alam.

But some believe politics played a part.

“India displayed inhumanity by opening the dam without warning,” said Nahid Islam, one of the two student representatives in Bangladesh’s interim government, headed by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus.

Three weeks ago, Bangladesh ejected its long-standing Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina after a student-led protest movement against job quotas morphed into a nationwide movement to force her out of power when she ordered a bloody crackdown, killing hundreds of people.

Hasina fled by helicopter to India on August 5, after tens of thousands of people marched on the capital and her residence. During her 15 years in power, Hasina formed strong ties with India and Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is now serving a rare third term.

After her ouster, reports emerged of reprisal attacks against people viewed as loyal to Hasina’s party – many of them Hindus – which sparked major concern in neighboring Hindu-majority India.

India’s Ministry of External Affairs said in statement Thursday that it was “factually not correct” to blame the flooding on water released from Dumbur dam.

It said flooding in Bangladesh was “primarily” due to water flowing from large catchment areas on the Gumti River, downstream from the dam.

“Floods on the common rivers between India and Bangladesh are a shared problem inflicting sufferings to people on both sides, and requires close mutual cooperation towards resolving them,” the statement said.

‘They’re very scared’​

As the diplomatic row builds, rescue teams are working around the clock in the flood zone – where every rescue operation is a huge logistical challenge.

What would usually be a four-hour drive from Dhaka is double that on the gridlocked roads as rescue workers and volunteers try to access the flood region from all over the country. Boats are hard to come by – so many families arrive to retrieve their relatives but then have no way to reach them.

“I’m helpless because I don’t have a boat,” said Yasin Arafat, 24, who came from Dhaka to try to reach his father, mother, grandmother and younger brother.

He has heard there are 35 families clinging to a rooftop in his village, including two pregnant women. But it’s a three-hour boat ride from the city and he can’t find a rescue boat to take him there.

“They have no water, no food, and they’re very scared,” he said. “In the last 48 hours, I haven’t had any news.”

Even when people can source a boat, there are sections of the city on higher ground – including the railway track – where the vessels need to carried manually by dozens of volunteers.

The main highway through Feni has now turned into its main waterway – and is being used as the central route for people to make it to dry land.

Some of the people able to walk out are wading through waist- or chest-high muddy water – risking water-borne diseases, snakes or drowning to try to reach safety.

For many others in the deepest parts of the flood, it’s impossible to try walking – so they are stranded in villages several kilometers from the city center. Even the boat journey to these areas is risky – navigating through dense trees and marshes risks clogging the engine or hitting underwater obstacles invisible in the murky water.

Our boat passes by a government building being used as a rescue center, where an estimated 500 people are sheltering.

Other multi-story buildings – including a flooded hospital and several schools – are being used as a temporary home for those living in single-story shacks that are now underwater. They are physically safe but lacking food, water and medicine.

Peyara Akther, 36, is trying to rescue her sister Tanzina and her sick newborn baby from the rural outskirts of the city. She said the 1-month-old hasn’t been eating for the past few days and needs to get to a doctor.

“I’m worried the baby won’t make it,” Akther told CNN.

But after searching for an hour to make it to the school where she believes her sister might be sheltering, there’s no sign of them – the communications blackout compounding the mounting problems facing these rescue operations.

Akther makes her way home, in the hope her sister has found another way there.

We head further north with a different boat to witness the next rescue operation.

A Feni-born man who works as a security guard at a hospital in Qatar flew back to Bangladesh when he heard what was happening in his hometown.

He managed to source a boat in the hope of rescuing his 55-year-old mother, but her location is too remote to reach. Instead, he came to a shelter to retrieve other relatives.

The family of four - a mother, child and grandparents - struggle into the boat, clambering up with the help of people on board. They are all exhausted and visibly hungry, devouring snacks of nuts and dried fruits, and gulping down water.

“We are happy now,” said grandfather Mizanur Rahman Khan, 65. “We are safe.”

As the darkness closes in on Friday evening, rescue efforts continue into the night to try to get the families of Feni to safety.

The main hope in this city is that the stranded people will survive long enough for aid to come – or for the floodwaters to recede.

CNN’s Esha Mitra contributed reporting from New Delhi.

Millions in Bangladeh are stranded by flooding. Many blame their neighbor
 
Al-Jazeera

More than 300,000 in emergency shelters after Bangladesh floods

Relentless monsoon rains and flooding have submerged vast areas in Bangladesh, damaging homes and infrastructure.​


River waters in low-lying Bangladesh are receding after days of deadly floods but 300,000 people are still in emergency shelters requiring aid, disaster officials said on Sunday.

The heavy floods, which killed at least 18 people in Bangladesh, have added to the challenges of a new government that took charge this month after mass student-led protests.

Rescue teams, including joint forces of the army, air force and navy, are helping people forced from their homes and bringing aid to those who have lost everything, Disaster Management Minister Faruk-e-Azam said.

“The flood situation is improving as the flood water started to recede,” he said.

More than 307,000 people are in shelters and more than 5.2 million have been affected by the floods, the ministry said.

“Now we are working to restore communication in the affected areas so that we can distribute relief food,” Azam said. “We are also taking steps so that contagious diseases don’t spread.”

People in Bangladesh have been crowdfunding relief efforts.

The floods add to the woes of a nation still reeling from weeks of political turmoil that culminated in the toppling of Sheikh Hasina, who fled to India by helicopter.

She was replaced by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus, who is heading an interim government that faces the monumental task of charting democratic reforms ahead of expected new elections.

Highways and rail lines were damaged between the capital Dhaka and the main port city of Chittagong, making access to badly flooded districts difficult and disrupting business activity.

Monsoon rains cause widespread destruction yearly but climate change is shifting weather patterns and increasing the number of extreme weather events.

The South Asian nation of 170 million people is among the countries most vulnerable to disasters and climate change, according to the Global Climate Risk Index.

Hard-hit areas include the southeastern regions around Chittagong and Cox’s Bazar, home to about a million Rohingya refugees from neighbouring Myanmar.
 
Al-Jazeera

Deadly floods leave millions stranded in Bangladesh

More than four million people have been affected by the floods triggered by torrential rains, with hundreds of homes under water.​


At least 13 people have been killed and 4.5 million affected by floods triggered by heavy rains in eastern Bangladesh, the Ministry of Disaster Management and Relief says.

Floods triggered by torrential rains have swamped swaths of low-lying Bangladesh and rescuers are scrambling to evacuate flooded communities.

The ministry said on Friday that nearly 190,000 people were taken to emergency relief shelters and 11 of the country’s 64 districts were affected by the flooding.

Feni, about 100km (60 miles) northwest of the main port city of Chittagong, was worst hit.

The South Asian nation of 170 million people, crisscrossed by hundreds of rivers, has seen frequent floods in recent decades.

It is among the countries most vulnerable to disasters and climate change, according to the Global Climate Risk Index.

Three of those who died drowned in floodwaters in the southeastern region of Cox’s Bazar, chief administrative officer of Ramu district Rasedul Islam said.

The annual monsoon rains cause widespread destruction every year, but climate change is shifting weather patterns and increasing the number of extreme weather events.

The army and the navy have been deployed, with speedboats and helicopters rescuing those stranded by the swollen rivers.

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Newslaundry

Zee Media website hacked, defaced for ‘making fun’ of floods in Bangladesh

A message by the hackers included a screenshot of a ZEE TV Bangla report, accusing it of mocking the flood situation in Bangladesh.

The official website of Zee Media Corporation has been hacked and defaced allegedly by a Bangladeshi hackers group, as claimed in a message displayed on the homepage of the website.

The message that appeared on the website on Wednesday, says “hacked by Systemadminbd” and “Webserver seized by Systemadminbd” because Zee Media “made fun of the situation in Bangladesh”. It further warned that “if they continue with their dirty behaviour, we will take over and destroy their channel”.

It featured a screenshot of a ZEE TV Bangla news report headlined: “India released the water! Bangladesh is now submerged”. It also reportedly said: “Due to the flood, the authorities have opened the dam of the Dambur hydroelectric project. As a result, Bangladesh is about to float.”

The website was still down at the time of publishing this report. “Hacked by Systemadminbd”, read the result of a Google search of the website.

Media reports said that Systemadminbd is a hackers group active since April last year. The group reportedly engages in cyber activities such as website defacement and data breaches and has previously targeted websites in Bangladesh, India, Israel and Europe
 
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Reuters

Bangladesh floods leave 23 dead, 5.7 million people affected

DHAKA, Aug 26 (Reuters) - The death toll from devastating floods caused by relentless monsoon rain and overflowing rivers in Bangladesh has risen to 23, with around 1.24 million families stranded across 11 districts, officials said on Monday.
As floodwaters recede slowly, many of the 5.7 million affected people remain isolated and in urgent need of food, clean water, medicine and dry clothes, above all in remote areas where blocked roads have hindered rescue and relief efforts.

The Bangladesh Meteorological Department said that flood conditions could persist if the monsoon rains continued, as water levels were receding very slowly.

Around 470,000 people have taken refuge in 3,500 shelters in the flood-hit districts, where around 650 medical teams are on the ground to provide treatment, with the army, air force, navy, and the South Asian country's border guard assisting in rescue and relief operations, authorities said.

Vast areas of land are submerged, posing a significant threat to crops if the floodwaters linger for an extended period, agriculture ministry officials said.
An analysis in 2015 by the World Bank Institute estimated that 3.5 million people in Bangladesh, one of the world's most climate-vulnerable countries, were at risk of annual river flooding. Scientists attribute the exacerbation of such catastrophic events to climate change.

"Countries like Bangladesh with negligible emissions and whose people have shown super resilience deserve immediate funds to address the impacts of climate change and frequent disasters," said Farah Kabir, director of ActionAid Bangladesh.

"We need to recover from the losses and damage we have faced, as well as build resilience to future impacts and take on green development pathways."

In one of the worst-hit districts, Noakhali, 56-year-old Shukuri Begum lost her home as it was swept into a pond by the floodwaters, according to ActionAid. Terrified, she fled with her grandchildren to a neighbour's house, but couldn't stay there long as it was no longer safe.

"I have a son with physical disabilities, and we couldn’t bring him with us. We had to stack beds and leave him on top, hoping he would be safe. I don’t know what’s waiting for us," ActionAid quoted her as saying.
 
The Daily Star

Floods 2024: Bangladesh’s unexpected show of solidarity

After the revolution, we faced yet another disaster caused by the torrential flood. Being one of the worst flood crises in decades, everyday citizens of Bangladesh have displayed, yet another, extraordinary level of solidarity and resourcefulness.

It has been an eye-opener for the nation since the cascading effect left by the recent mass uprising. From offering drinking water to a rickshaw-puller peddling injured victims to hospitals free of charge, it cemented the idea that people are willing to save lives beyond just caring about their brethren. After the revolution, we faced yet another disaster caused by the torrential flood. Being one of the worst flood crises in decades, everyday citizens of Bangladesh have displayed, yet another, extraordinary level of solidarity and resourcefulness. Individuals, groups, religious institutions, and the armed services have all contributed to the continuing relief operations around the nation, assisting the millions of people impacted by the floods.

Grassroots efforts and community support

Local communities have been organising relief activities in numerous locations on their own initiative. Contributing food, water, and clothing was only the tip of the positivity iceberg; the youth have even built improvised rafts to rescue trapped people. When it came to cities and streets, people from all walks of life formed long queues to donate whatever they could to help the flood-affected victims.

To put things into perspective, members of the third-gender community, children, and even homeless people have been seen to donate whatever they could.

Role of the student community

At Dhaka University's TSC area, a massive relief operation is underway, with students and volunteers working tirelessly to collect, sort, and package essential supplies for flood-affected areas.

The TSC cafeteria and games room are overflowing with donations, ranging from food and medicine to clothing and water. Spilling out onto the field where rows of relief packages stretch like a sea of hope. The entire campus has become a hub of unity and purpose, with people from all walks of life contributing.

As volunteers work in shifts, the operation continues to grow, with over 1 crore 24 lakh taka collected in cash donations alone.

The role of religious institutions

The involvement of religious institutions in the relief operations has been one of the most touching parts. Temples and other religious institutions have come forward with financial support, at times even taking money meant for religious festivities and rerouting it. This act of selflessness demonstrates the community's dedication to helping people in need despite differences in religion or culture.

Military involvement: A critical lifeline

The Army, Navy, and Air Force of Bangladesh have been instrumental in the flood relief efforts. Several of the hardest-hit districts, including Feni, Chattogram, Cumilla, Noakhali, Sunamganj, and Habiganj, have seen the army's deployment. There, they have carried out relief distribution, medical attention, and rescue operations.

The army has played an especially important role in regions where rising water levels have restricted civilian access. Army medical personnel have been sent to certain locations to provide vital medical care to flood victims.

The Bangladesh Navy has also played a significant role, especially when it comes to saving lives in places where boats are the only practical mode of transportation. The Navy, for instance, has been actively involved in rescue efforts and the provision of basic supplies in Feni, working nonstop to reach outlying settlements.

The Bangladesh Air Force has also contributed airborne support, which has improved the efficiency of relief activities and allowed for a more accurate assessment of the damage. The military's multifaceted strategy has made sure that assistance reaches even the most isolated locations, where the need is frequently highest.

The Bangladesh Army furthered the continuing relief efforts by paying a day's salary from all ranks to the Chief Advisor's Relief Fund as a show of solidarity.

A unified response

The way Bangladesh responded to the floods in 2024 shows how strong togetherness can be in times of adversity. The national defence forces, religious organisations, and local communities have worked together in a way that is given as examples in books. This cohesive strategy serves as a potent reminder of the value of sticking together in the face of difficulty in addition to demonstrating the resiliency of the Bangladeshi people.

As the nation embarks on the protracted process of recuperation and the floods start to retreat, the joint endeavours of all those engaged in the relief efforts will be cherished as evidence of the resilience of the Bangladeshi people and their community.

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Asia News Network

Bangladesh floods: Relief delivery is now the challenge

4 more die as new areas have been flooded in Noakhali, Cumilla.
DHAKA
– People wishing to distribute relief materials among the flood victims are finding it very difficult to reach remote areas due to a lack of boats.

All major roads in the 12 flood-affected districts have been flooded at places.

People in the hardest-hit districts — Noakhali, Feni, Cumilla, and Laxmipur — blamed a lack of coordination between government agencies for their plight.

Many in the four districts said relief was being distributed among those living close to the main roads and some people received relief materials multiple times. They called for a more equitable distribution of relief.

The water levels of all major rivers in the 10 districts dropped yesterday. However, some new areas went under water in Cumilla, and Noakhali.

Four more flood-related deaths were reported yesterday, including two minors in Cumilla’s Burichang upazila, raising the death toll to 23.

Two people were reported missing in Moulvibazar.

Israt Jahan, of Feni’s Parshuram upazila, said despite being hit by floods six days ago, no relief materials reached them.

“We badly need food and drinking water as our stock has run out. No one in my neighbourhood has received aid,” she said yesterday.

Volunteers said they could not access remote areas due to a shortage of boats.

“We wanted to distribute relief in Bhaluka and Ghopal areas, but we could not go past Shuvapur because of a scarcity of boats,” said Shihab Jisan Anik, a volunteer from Prothom Alo Bandhushava and Prothom Alo Trust working in Feni.

He said people in those remote areas have yet to receive any assistance.

Admitting the problem, Feni Deputy Commissioner Shahina Akhter said they will coordinate with the UNOs from today to ensure all flood victims receive the necessary aid.

In Noakhali, people in remote areas are also suffering due to poor supply of relief materials.

Nurnabi Bachchu, of Senbagh, said their area has been waterlogged for several days.

“People living close to the roads have received relief multiple times, but those in remote areas have got nothing,” he said.

Md Shahid Ullah, a resident of Arjuntala village in Senbagh upazila, said vehicles supplied relief materials in the upazila town and the municipality area.

“Some people had 8-10 packs, but those who could not reach those areas are struggling to survive with their families,” he told The Daily Star yesterday.

In Cumilla, volunteers could not distribute relief in most of the areas of Chauddagram, Nangalkot and Burichang upazilas yesterday due to a lack of boats.

Salauddin Khandaker, a volunteer, said they somehow managed a boat, but most volunteers could not access remote areas.

Denying any lack of coordination among the government agencies, Pangkaj Barua, additional deputy commissioner of Cumilla, said they were working together to supply relief.

He urged the volunteers to contact the district administration for any assistance in relief distribution.

NEW AREAS FLOODED

New areas in Noakhali were flooded yesterday as 23 gates of Musapur regulator in Companiganj upazila collapsed due to the pressure of water, said Munshi Amir Faisal, executive engineer at Water Development Board.

This is likely to aggravate the flooding in Companiganj and Kabirhat upazilas, he said.

The flood situation in 82 unions across seven municipalities and eight upazilas of Noakhali worsened yesterday due to incessant rains since Saturday.

Noakhali Additional Deputy Commissioner Sharmin Ara said about two million people have been marooned in the district. Of them, 182,000 have taken shelter in 1,098 centres.

Fatehpur, Subil, and Boroshalghal unions in Debidwer upazila of Cumilla were inundated in 24 hours.

The overall flood situation in the 10 other districts improved significantly yesterday as the floodwaters started receding.

The Disaster Management Ministry in a release yesterday said floods have directly affected over 5.71 million people in 11 districts

At least 74 upazilas have been severely impacted. The authorities have opened 3,834 shelters, providing refuge to over 4.69 lakh people.

The Flood Forecasting and Warning Centre (FFWC) yesterday said the water levels of the rivers in the flood-hit districts were falling.

“Rivers were previously flowing above the danger levels in at least 13 points. But only the Gumti river is now flowing above the danger level at one point. I think the situation will improve further tomorrow [today],” said Sarder Udoy Raihan, executive engineer of FFWC.

Asked about the situation in the Ganges basin, he said there is no chance of flooding in the Ganges basin over the next one week as the water level there was still below the danger level.

HOME ADVISER DISTRIBUTES RELIEF

Home Adviser Lt Gen (retd) Md Jahangir Alam Chowdhury yesterday said the country is facing severe floods. But if the people remain united, all problems can be resolved.

He was speaking to journalists after distributing relief and medical supplies among the flood victims at the Noakhali Police Training Centre.

The adviser said there would be no shortage of relief materials and medicines. He said the authorities were facing difficulties in accessing some areas, but those problems would be over soon.

He urged all to cooperate with the authorities to ensure that relief reaches all flood-hit areas.

In a press statement, the Inter Services Public Relation Directorate (ISPR) yesterday detailed the Bangladesh Army’s rescue operations and relief distribution.

The Army Aviation Group conducted rescue and relief missions using 15 helicopter. Eleven critically ill patients were rescued and transferred to hospitals, while 24 individuals were relocated to safety.

Despite adverse weather conditions, the Army distributed 4,839 relief packages, 50,400 liters of fresh water, 500 mobile phones, and one lakh water purification tablets via helicopters in Sylhet, Chattogram, and Feni, said the ISPR statement.

2024-08-27_085618-7g41t50vvkm50iwsstyioeh8g43rxny909bktl22csg.jpg
 
Asia News Network

Bangladesh floods: Relief delivery is now the challenge

4 more die as new areas have been flooded in Noakhali, Cumilla.
DHAKA
– People wishing to distribute relief materials among the flood victims are finding it very difficult to reach remote areas due to a lack of boats.

All major roads in the 12 flood-affected districts have been flooded at places.

People in the hardest-hit districts — Noakhali, Feni, Cumilla, and Laxmipur — blamed a lack of coordination between government agencies for their plight.

Many in the four districts said relief was being distributed among those living close to the main roads and some people received relief materials multiple times. They called for a more equitable distribution of relief.

The water levels of all major rivers in the 10 districts dropped yesterday. However, some new areas went under water in Cumilla, and Noakhali.

Four more flood-related deaths were reported yesterday, including two minors in Cumilla’s Burichang upazila, raising the death toll to 23.

Two people were reported missing in Moulvibazar.

Israt Jahan, of Feni’s Parshuram upazila, said despite being hit by floods six days ago, no relief materials reached them.

“We badly need food and drinking water as our stock has run out. No one in my neighbourhood has received aid,” she said yesterday.

Volunteers said they could not access remote areas due to a shortage of boats.

“We wanted to distribute relief in Bhaluka and Ghopal areas, but we could not go past Shuvapur because of a scarcity of boats,” said Shihab Jisan Anik, a volunteer from Prothom Alo Bandhushava and Prothom Alo Trust working in Feni.

He said people in those remote areas have yet to receive any assistance.

Admitting the problem, Feni Deputy Commissioner Shahina Akhter said they will coordinate with the UNOs from today to ensure all flood victims receive the necessary aid.

In Noakhali, people in remote areas are also suffering due to poor supply of relief materials.

Nurnabi Bachchu, of Senbagh, said their area has been waterlogged for several days.

“People living close to the roads have received relief multiple times, but those in remote areas have got nothing,” he said.

Md Shahid Ullah, a resident of Arjuntala village in Senbagh upazila, said vehicles supplied relief materials in the upazila town and the municipality area.

“Some people had 8-10 packs, but those who could not reach those areas are struggling to survive with their families,” he told The Daily Star yesterday.

In Cumilla, volunteers could not distribute relief in most of the areas of Chauddagram, Nangalkot and Burichang upazilas yesterday due to a lack of boats.

Salauddin Khandaker, a volunteer, said they somehow managed a boat, but most volunteers could not access remote areas.

Denying any lack of coordination among the government agencies, Pangkaj Barua, additional deputy commissioner of Cumilla, said they were working together to supply relief.

He urged the volunteers to contact the district administration for any assistance in relief distribution.

NEW AREAS FLOODED

New areas in Noakhali were flooded yesterday as 23 gates of Musapur regulator in Companiganj upazila collapsed due to the pressure of water, said Munshi Amir Faisal, executive engineer at Water Development Board.

This is likely to aggravate the flooding in Companiganj and Kabirhat upazilas, he said.

The flood situation in 82 unions across seven municipalities and eight upazilas of Noakhali worsened yesterday due to incessant rains since Saturday.

Noakhali Additional Deputy Commissioner Sharmin Ara said about two million people have been marooned in the district. Of them, 182,000 have taken shelter in 1,098 centres.

Fatehpur, Subil, and Boroshalghal unions in Debidwer upazila of Cumilla were inundated in 24 hours.

The overall flood situation in the 10 other districts improved significantly yesterday as the floodwaters started receding.

The Disaster Management Ministry in a release yesterday said floods have directly affected over 5.71 million people in 11 districts

At least 74 upazilas have been severely impacted. The authorities have opened 3,834 shelters, providing refuge to over 4.69 lakh people.

The Flood Forecasting and Warning Centre (FFWC) yesterday said the water levels of the rivers in the flood-hit districts were falling.

“Rivers were previously flowing above the danger levels in at least 13 points. But only the Gumti river is now flowing above the danger level at one point. I think the situation will improve further tomorrow [today],” said Sarder Udoy Raihan, executive engineer of FFWC.

Asked about the situation in the Ganges basin, he said there is no chance of flooding in the Ganges basin over the next one week as the water level there was still below the danger level.

HOME ADVISER DISTRIBUTES RELIEF

Home Adviser Lt Gen (retd) Md Jahangir Alam Chowdhury yesterday said the country is facing severe floods. But if the people remain united, all problems can be resolved.

He was speaking to journalists after distributing relief and medical supplies among the flood victims at the Noakhali Police Training Centre.

The adviser said there would be no shortage of relief materials and medicines. He said the authorities were facing difficulties in accessing some areas, but those problems would be over soon.

He urged all to cooperate with the authorities to ensure that relief reaches all flood-hit areas.

In a press statement, the Inter Services Public Relation Directorate (ISPR) yesterday detailed the Bangladesh Army’s rescue operations and relief distribution.

The Army Aviation Group conducted rescue and relief missions using 15 helicopter. Eleven critically ill patients were rescued and transferred to hospitals, while 24 individuals were relocated to safety.

Despite adverse weather conditions, the Army distributed 4,839 relief packages, 50,400 liters of fresh water, 500 mobile phones, and one lakh water purification tablets via helicopters in Sylhet, Chattogram, and Feni, said the ISPR statement.

2024-08-27_085618-7g41t50vvkm50iwsstyioeh8g43rxny909bktl22csg.jpg

You are just flooding the forum now.
We get it there is a flood in Bangladesh. You don’t have to post a 109 articles to prove it.

Sad situation
Howeve, the Bangladeshiz should have been careful and refrained from mocking the old Gods. This is nothing but Prakruti’s wrath.
 
Brother.you need to stop posting same kind of news again and again.

Bangladesh is in bad situation, sorry for that, so are many other countries atm...
Posting same stuff won't make any difference.
 
You are just flooding the forum now.
We get it there is a flood in Bangladesh. You don’t have to post a 109 articles to prove it.

Sad situation
Howeve, the Bangladeshiz should have been careful and refrained from mocking the old Gods. This is nothing but Prakruti’s wrath.
You can flood the forum with Anti Bangladesh misinformation but I cannot post the real situation of Bangladesh now.
 
Sad to hear that. Climate change is devastating. Bangladesh authorities clearly don't have the competence to handle these things.
 
Brother.you need to stop posting same kind of news again and again.

Bangladesh is in bad situation, sorry for that, so are many other countries atm...
Posting same stuff won't make any difference.
Fine I will not post anymore, but what action are this forum is taking from Indians to post propaganda and misinformation regarding Bangladesh?
 
Fine I will not post anymore, but what action are this forum is taking from Indians to post propaganda and misinformation regarding Bangladesh?

You should post as much as you want brother and expose Bharat where you can. As a new poster myself, I too have only just realised the joy of exposing other side. The way you did it seemed a bit repetitive though, so that can be improved. Also, calling something propaganda doesn't make it one as long as there are reliable sources claiming the same. Basic debate rules.

Good luck Bhai <3
 
India opened certain dams without notifying Bangladeshi authorities (was it because of removal of their puppet Hasina)?

Those openings of dams either caused and magnified the flood.

Shameful.

Anyway, I think Bangladesh should build their own dams now so that India can't do this again. Get China involved if needed (China actually offered to build dams before if I am not wrong).
 
India opened certain dams without notifying Bangladeshi authorities (was it because of removal of their puppet Hasina)?

Those openings of dams either caused and magnified the flood.

Shameful.

Anyway, I think Bangladesh should build their own dams now so that India can't do this again. Get China involved if needed (China actually offered to build dams before if I am not wrong).

You have now entered the era of water warfare.

Should have been careful while mocking the Gods.
 
Fine I will not post anymore, but what action are this forum is taking from Indians to post propaganda and misinformation regarding Bangladesh?
Indian evil has been exposed across the world. They are now using eco terrorism. Don't worry about their misinformation. The world knows what they are doing brother.
 
India opened certain dams without notifying Bangladeshi authorities (was it because of removal of their puppet Hasina)?

Those openings of dams either caused and magnified the flood.

Shameful.

Anyway, I think Bangladesh should build their own dams now so that India can't do this again. Get China involved if needed (China actually offered to build dams before if I am not wrong).
Dams are automated
 
Question is best asked to Modi who is wining and dining Hasina Bibi.

That's Sanatan sanskar, Bharat isn't one to turn away former friends. If Russia is out for Putin's blood tomorrow, ModiJi will still allow him a comfortable refuge in Bharat, as long as there's no other option.
 
Guys bump other relevant threads for off topic discussion, this is a Bangladesh flood related thread
 
That's Sanatan sanskar, Bharat isn't one to turn away former friends. If Russia is out for Putin's blood tomorrow, ModiJi will still allow him a comfortable refuge in Bharat, as long as there's no other option.
Well there is the answer to your question as to what India gained. A lifelong friend and refugee.

Was it worth it?
 
Well there is the answer to your question as to what India gained. A lifelong friend and refugee.

Was it worth it?


So, for me it's not about gaining or losing something, it's about principles. India's refuge is just, but at the same time not unconditional. A bunch of very smart individuals will take a decision on her stay or departure, so that shouldn't be a concern, the matter should be closed. In the end, a gesture was made, and Bharat takes pride in it.
 
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India opened certain dams without notifying Bangladeshi authorities (was it because of removal of their puppet Hasina)?

Those openings of dams either caused and magnified the flood.

Shameful.

Anyway, I think Bangladesh should build their own dams now so that India can't do this again. Get China involved if needed (China actually offered to build dams before if I am not wrong).
This is a pretty uninformed post on a sensitive subject. Dams have a certain capacity and cannot hold beyond that.2 Indian authorities themselves have acknowledged the delay in communication though it's doubtful how much a few hours warning may have helped. Certainly wouldn't have prevented the flooding.

Though I do agree the mocking tone adopted by a few Indian posters is cheap and incredibly unwarranted.
 
This is a pretty uninformed post on a sensitive subject. Dams have a certain capacity and cannot hold beyond that.2 Indian authorities themselves have acknowledged the delay in communication though it's doubtful how much a few hours warning may have helped. Certainly wouldn't have prevented the flooding.

Though I do agree the mocking tone adopted by a few Indian posters is cheap and incredibly unwarranted.
Perception is important.

I didn't really know too much about the Bangladesh/India dynamic.

Since then I've spoken to a lot of Bangladeshis ( caveat this it's British Bangladeshis).

They are blaming India for everything and genuinely believe India has flooded their country too. I think this sentiment is reflective of the mood in Bangladesh.

India seems to have created a potential security threat on its borders via an irate Bangladeshi population with nothing to show for it in return.
 
So, for me it's not about gaining or losing something, it's about principles. India's refuge is just, but at the same time not unconditional. A bunch of very smart individuals will take a decision on her stay or departure, so that shouldn't be a concern, the matter should be closed. In the end, a gesture was made, and Bharat takes pride in it.
It is a great principle to save one women and make over 170 million enemies. I'm glad this is a source of pride for you and Bharat.
 
Perception is important.

I didn't really know too much about the Bangladesh/India dynamic.

Since then I've spoken to a lot of Bangladeshis ( caveat this it's British Bangladeshis).

They are blaming India for everything and genuinely believe India has flooded their country too. I think this sentiment is reflective of the mood in Bangladesh.

India seems to have created a potential security threat on its borders via an irate Bangladeshi population with nothing to show for it in return.
I think this is better. If India and Bangladesh officially become enemies, it will help prevent the illegal smuggling and immigration.

Nothing to gain from a friendly bangladesh. That country is doomed anyway.

I want any Bangladeshi reading my post to remember that I said this: The worse days of BD are ahead.
 
I think this is better. If India and Bangladesh officially become enemies, it will help prevent the illegal smuggling and immigration.

Nothing to gain from a friendly bangladesh. That country is doomed anyway.

I want any Bangladeshi reading my post to remember that I said this: The worse days of BD are ahead.
How bad to think foul of your neighbor at such a time of calamity.
 
It is a great principle to save one women and make over 170 million enemies. I'm glad this is a source of pride for you and Bharat.

You might be overestimating the ease of making enemies here. Bangladeshi population were no friend regardless, as they have proven attacking Hindus and Temples nationwide. But they are not enemies either, not for me or Indian govt I beleive.

There need to be big-enough fundamental pressure-points for enmity like our two nations. Despite the current scenario, I see this India Vs Bangladesh thing fizzled out soon. Look at Maldives, from India out to Muizzu calling India one of the two closest allies. It's hard to have nafratein like ours brother.
 
Perception is important.

I didn't really know too much about the Bangladesh/India dynamic.

Since then I've spoken to a lot of Bangladeshis ( caveat this it's British Bangladeshis).

They are blaming India for everything and genuinely believe India has flooded their country too. I think this sentiment is reflective of the mood in Bangladesh.

India seems to have created a potential security threat on its borders via an irate Bangladeshi population with nothing to show for it in return.

Not just British-Bangladeshis. Most Bangladeshis worldwide don't like India currently.

It is because of BJP's Islamophobia, Indian interference in Bangladesh, Hasina's (puppet of India) antics etc.

India have indeed flooded Bangladesh by opening their dams without notifying Bangladeshi authorities. You can check online.

Anyway, Bangladesh should take it as a lesson and build dams so that India can't do this in the future. Maybe China can assist.
 
It is a great principle to save one women and make over 170 million enemies. I'm glad this is a source of pride for you and Bharat.
If bringing them into existence and saving their population from further genocide did not make the Bangladeshis consider India as a friend, I doubt anything else will. It only goes to show that whatever the truth, Bangladeshis are more likely to believe anti-India propaganda from certain quarters than think logically.
 
I don't know what BJP Indians are posting here regarding the flood. I have like 35+ of them on ignore. So, I can't see their posts.

If people want to know real news, they should check reputable sources online (BBC, Guardian etc.). They may also check major Bangladeshi sources for accurate information.
 
Perception is important.

I didn't really know too much about the Bangladesh/India dynamic.

Since then I've spoken to a lot of Bangladeshis ( caveat this it's British Bangladeshis).

They are blaming India for everything and genuinely believe India has flooded their country too. I think this sentiment is reflective of the mood in Bangladesh.

India seems to have created a potential security threat on its borders via an irate Bangladeshi population with nothing to show for it in return.

They can blame all they want. India isn't Bangladesh's baby sitter.

What security threat? With Hasina gone India can now take a stricter stance at the border.
 
It is a great principle to save one women and make over 170 million enemies. I'm glad this is a source of pride for you and Bharat.

When millions bangladeshis flooded India to escape genocide, India gave them refuge, created a country for them.

But today you see them breaking statues of Sheikh Mujibur. If that's their attitude towards their founder, then their attitude towards India doesn't surprise me.

Saving a friend who has sought refuge is a ancient practice.
 
This is a pretty uninformed post on a sensitive subject. Dams have a certain capacity and cannot hold beyond that.2 Indian authorities themselves have acknowledged the delay in communication though it's doubtful how much a few hours warning may have helped. Certainly wouldn't have prevented the flooding.

Though I do agree the mocking tone adopted by a few Indian posters is cheap and incredibly unwarranted.

You are talking to people who believe xyz country can create floods.

Next they will blame India for a cyclone.
 
Perception is important.

I didn't really know too much about the Bangladesh/India dynamic.

Since then I've spoken to a lot of Bangladeshis ( caveat this it's British Bangladeshis).

They are blaming India for everything and genuinely believe India has flooded their country too. I think this sentiment is reflective of the mood in Bangladesh.

India seems to have created a potential security threat on its borders via an irate Bangladeshi population with nothing to show for it in return.
Reminds me of the Mexico-US dynamic. They resent India and it's interference and think of Indian as supercilious. Personally, I don't think they hate as much. Millions come over for employment and tens of thousands for medical treatment.

Indians have a bit of a (partly unwarranted) superiority complex and think them ungrateful and resent and overamplify illegal migration.

In the end, 9/10th of their land border is India, they buy a lot of energy from us and have taken loans and investments from India. We'll rebuild some kind of relationship.
 
Reminds me of the Mexico-US dynamic. They resent India and it's interference and think of Indian as supercilious. Personally, I don't think they hate as much. Millions come over for employment and tens of thousands for medical treatment.

Indians have a bit of a (partly unwarranted) superiority complex and think them ungrateful and resent and overamplify illegal migration.

In the end, 9/10th of their land border is India, they buy a lot of energy from us and have taken loans and investments from India. We'll rebuild some kind of relationship.
Personally, you don't "think" they hate as much. You have no idea.
 
I don't know what BJP Indians are posting here regarding the flood. I have like 35+ of them on ignore. So, I can't see their posts.

If people want to know real news, they should check reputable sources online (BBC, Guardian etc.). They may also check major Bangladeshi sources for accurate information.
According to this BBC article , 3,600 attacks on Hindus in Bangladesh between 2013 and 2021.


I suppose BBC is a good enough source only when it suits your agenda.
 
According to this BBC article , 3,600 attacks on Hindus in Bangladesh between 2013 and 2021.

Absolutely true, but under whose regime were those crimes have been orchestrated. The Indian friend Sheikh Hasina(2009-2024). If you talk to normal and poor hindus, then you will find that those crimes were mostly done by Awamileague cadre, again from the party where Indian friend Sheikh Hasina was ruling. And India were helping and supporting that regime from top to bottom.

It is correctly reported in the above link that Hindus are easy targets in Bangladesh regardless done by Islamists or by a Indian friends regime.
 
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