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Bangladesh faces further flood crisis in monsoon-hit South Asia
by Staff Writers
Dhaka (AFP) July 21, 2020

Nine dead, 20,000 affected by Niger floods
Niamey (AFP) July 21, 2020 - Heavy floods in Niger have claimed nine lives and destroyed more than 2,000 homes , affecting at least 20,000 people, the interior ministry said on Tuesday.

The southwestern Dosso region, central-south Maradi and Tahoua and Tillaberi in the west have been worst hit, it said in a statement.

Niger, one of the world's driest as well as poorest countries, often experiences intense rainy seasons, which typically last two or three months.

The authorities announced early this month that more than 300,000 people were at risk from flooding by the Niger River and from rainwater runoff since heavy rains began in June.

Fifty-seven people died last year and more than 200,000 others were affected by floods that struck the capital Niamey and the country's desert north.

The interior ministry urged people not to take shelter in ruined houses or to set up their homes in flood-prone areas.

Deadly flooding will persist in Bangladesh for the next 10 days, officials warned Tuesday, as South Asia battles torrential monsoon rains which have already pounded the region for weeks.

In flood-prone Bangladesh -- where almost one-third of the impoverished nation is underwater -- officials warned of an extended disaster in one of the worst deluges in recent years.

"The flood has been going on for at least 20 days," the deputy chief of Bangladesh's Flood Forecasting and Warning Centre, Udoy Raihan, told AFP, adding that flooding usually lasted two weeks.

"And it is likely continue for another 10 days due to heavy rains in Bangladesh and India."

The annual monsoon is critical for replenishing water supplies, but also wreaks havoc across vast swathes of the densely populated region, causing widespread death and damage.

At least 81 people have died in Bangladesh, mostly from drowning, officials said, with almost three million people hit by the natural disaster through flooded homes and inundated communities.

In Srinagar, a rural town just outside the capital Dhaka, some villagers fled to evacuation centres while others slept on boats and rafts made out of banana trunks lashed together with ropes to watch over their flooded homes.

"The last time we saw such flood was in 1998. We haven't seen such dangerous floods since then," Sheikh Moslem, 66, told AFP.

Sufia Begum, 40, said the flood levels were up to her neck.

"I am more worried about my two cows," she told AFP as she looked at her submerged home and cowshed. "They are my only source of income. I can't leave them here."

In India's northeastern state of Assam, conditions eased as the death toll since the start of July edged up to 58 people.

Many villagers whose homes were not fully submerged said they preferred to stay with their belongings despite the difficult conditions, and were being given food and water supplies from the government and local aid agencies.

"There is ankle-deep water inside our home. We will stay here until it's not manageable," Anima Begum, 40, told AFP from the Morigaon district in Assam.

At Assam's World Heritage-listed Kaziranga National Park, 116 animals have died so far, including nine rare one-horned rhinos.

In neighbouring Nepal, the government issued a fresh warning about rising river levels for the next three days as rescuers searched for 51 people missing in landslides and floods.

"Rescue and relief efforts are going on and we are on alert for areas at risk," Nepal's National Emergency Operation Centre chief Murari Wasti said.

At least 84 people have died in Nepal as multiple landslides ravaged the Himalayan nation's hill districts while incessant rainfall since Sunday has inundated parts of the southern plains.

burs-grk/je


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SHAKE AND BLOW
Yangtze floods force millions from their homes in central China
Jiujiang, China (AFP) July 17, 2020
Vast swathes of China have been inundated by the worst flooding in decades along the mighty Yangtze River, with residents piling into boats and makeshift rafts to escape a deluge that has collapsed flood defences and turned their homes into waterways. Heavy rains since June have left at least 141 people dead and missing, forced nearly 15 million people to be evacuated from their homes in July alone, and caused billions of dollars in economic losses, according to the government. An AFP photograp ... read more

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