Flood turns severe in central dists
Six rivers in central Bangladesh continued to rise as almost half the country remained under water until Wednesday, over a month after monsoon flood hit the country in late June.
The central Bangladesh rivers such as the Dhaleswari, Shitalakkhya, Balu, Turag, Kaliganga and Tongi Khal swelled up to 15cm between Tuesday and Wednesday, flooding fresh areas in Dhaka and its adjacent districts.
Flood remained largely unchanged in the northern area as the water level in the River Dharla remained unchanged while the Brahmaputra, Jamuna and Padma drained slowly.
‘The situation would remain more or less the same through the first week of August,’ Flood Forecasting and Warning Centre sub-divisional engineer Sarder Udoy Raihan told New Age.
He said that the flooding in central Bangladesh could get a little worse during the time but the overall situation would remain unchanged.
The number of flood victims crossed a quarter million in Dhaka as the flooding turned severe in a number of central districts with further deterioration of the situation predicted through Thursday.
‘We can say that the situation cannot get worse than it is now. And the situation is going to stay the same for a while,’ said Udoy.
An FFWC bulletin issued on Wednesday afternoon showed that the River Dharla in Kurigram continued to flow 7cm above its danger level with no change in its water level recorded in the 24 hours until 9:00am Wednesday.
Many rivers such as the Padma in Bhagyakul and Mawa, Gur in Singra, Titas in Brahmanbaria, and Atrai in Baghabari fell 5cm or less during the same time, continuing to flow up to more than one metre above their danger marks until Wednesday.
In central Bangladesh, rivers such as Turag swelled the most between Tuesday and Thursday mornings, flowing 23cm above the danger mark after a 15cm rise over the last 24 hours.
‘Nearly half of my constituency is under water,’ said Atikur Rahman, councillor of ward No 70, Dhaka South City Corporation.
He said that the situation worsened as the Balu kept swelling and there was no embankment to protect their part of the city when the river overflowed.
About three-fourths of ward 70 in the DSCC got flooded, disrupting the local road communication severely.
Dhaka district relief and rehabilitation officer Mohammad Hossain said that severe flooding engulfed parts of Savar, leaving 7,000 families stranded in water in four unions.
All six upazilas in Dhaka were more or less affected by the flood. Dohar emerged as the worst hit with the entire upazila going under water as the River Padma continued to flow 71cm above its danger mark at Bhagyakul.
It has been more than a month for some rivers since they first spilled their banks and continued flowing above their danger marks ever since affecting over 4.8 million people, according to official estimate.
The prolonged flood so far killed 129 people and brought immense sufferings to hundreds of thousands who are stranded at home or sheltered on embankments.
Misery became a part of their existence with little to eat and almost no water safe enough to drink.
New Age correspondent in Tangail reported that the sufferings of about three lakh people stranded in floodwaters in 11 of the 12 upazilas in the district persisted as government gave little attention to alleviate the flood-related problems.
At least 750 villages got flooded in Tangail and over 300km of road were partly or completely damaged alongside 165 bridges.
New Age correspondent in Munshiganj reported that 10 more villages got freshly inundated between Tuesday and Wednesday as the number of families affected by the flood in four of the six upazilas in the district stood at 32,000.
New Age correspondent in Lalmonirhat reported that the Dharla and Teesta continued to erode their banks as they devoured 183 houses between Tuesday and Wednesday.
So far 15,612 houses were lost to erosion in eight flood-affected districts in Rangpur division as four villages got completely wiped off the northern Bangladesh map since late June.
Over half a million people are stranded in the division as vast areas, especially in Kurigram district, remained submerged in water.
Meteorologist Abdul Mannan said that rivers drain slowly at this time of the year because of high water level in the Bay of Bengal.
‘There is a strong wind over the bay pushing waters coastward, further delaying the draining of rivers,’ said Mannan.
News Curtesy: www.newagebd.net