Land and life at the water’s mercy


Sifting through: Women cleaning algae from a shrimp enclosure amid parched soil at the Kholpetua river in the Parshemari village of Khulna district. — AFP

On the country’s coast, where mighty Himalayan rivers meet the sea, water defines every rhythm of life, and every struggle.

Rising seas driven by climate change are swallowing low-lying areas, while stronger storms push saltwater further inland, turning wells and lakes brackish, according to government scientists.

For the millions living in the ecologically sensitive deltas of mudflats and mangrove forests, finding clean drinking water has become an escalating challenge.

Cyclone Aila in 2009 was a turning point.

Embankments broke and saltwater swept inland, flooding not only homes, but seeping into once-fertile land.

The water that once sustained communities became undrinkable, and the land began to crack under layers of salt.

The people of Khulna and Satkhira districts today live in a fragile balancing act between land and sea.

Many families live in houses built on bamboo stilts to escape tidal floods.

Children bathe in yellow, saline water and grow up in a landscape of constant change, where rivers erode their homes and schools, and displacement has become the norm. Men migrate for months seeking work.

Women and children walk for hours across parched, cracked soil to fetch water from distant ponds, or harvest rainwater, and store it in tanks supplied by charities.

Each household stores a few thousand litres, rationed carefully until the next monsoon arrives.

The daily act of collecting and storing water has become a quiet ritual of endurance.

This reporting accompanies a photography series carried out by Muhammad Amdad Hossain for AFP’s 2025 Marai Photo Grant, an award open to photographers from South Asia aged 25 or under.

The theme for 2025 was “climate change” and its impact on daily life and the community of the photographers who enter.

The award is organised by Agence France-Presse in honour of Shah Marai, the former photo chief at AFP’s Kabul bureau.

Shah Marai, who was an inspiration for Afghan photographers throughout his career, was killed in the line of duty at the age of 41 in an extremist attack on April 30, 2018, in Kabul. — AFP

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Aseanplus News

Journalist arrested for trespass while covering undocumented migrants
A new blueprint for Chinese modernisation, a brighter chapter in building the China-Malaysia community with a shared future
Philippines' fertility rate continues to decline over the past three decades
Voyager, Icarus Robotics to test free-flying robot on space station
Prabowo entices deeper Japanese investments and offers 'real partnerships'
Asean News Headlines at 10pm on Monday (March 30, 2024)
Dissident artist on trial in China for satirical Mao sculptures, says rights group
Trump once again threatens to destroy Iran energy sites, desalination plants if talks fail
Indonesia to go ahead with B50 biodiesel mix this year, Prabowo says
The Philippines boosts fuel stocks as it looks to the Americas for supply

Others Also Read