Rains trigger fatal landslide


Landslides triggered by heavy monsoon rains in the southeastern region killed at least eight Rohingya refugees, inclu­ding five children, while heavy monsoon rains battered parts of neighbouring India, leaving 13 dead over the past few days.

Dollar Tripura, a Fire Service and Civil Defence official in Cox’s Bazar district, said rescuers recovered seven bodies while an eighth body was found by refugees after several hills collapsed from late Sunday to Monday morning.

All have been handed over to families, he said, adding that another two children were found with injuries.

Tripura said the landslides hit at least four locations across the camps, burying shelters under mud and debris while residents were asleep.

Authorities said they were relocating the refugees from at-risk hill areas, and some 1,000 people have already been relocated.

The weather office in the capital, Dhaka, has forecast more rain in the coming days.

In India, torrential monsoon rains battered large areas yesterday, triggering flash floods and landslides in the northern Himalayan states, and flooding roads and forcing schools to close in Mumbai.

Officials said continuous rain and hillside torrents loosened soil on slopes, causing makeshift houses to collapse.

In the country’s western Maharashtra state, home to Mumbai, said at least 13 people have died in rain-related incidents over the past several days as monsoon weather intensified.

In Pune district, landslides triggered by heavy rain forced officials to temporarily close sections of the Mumbai-Pune Expressway, disrupting traffic between the two cities.

The India Meteorological Depart­ment forecast more heavy rainfall across Maharashtra in the coming days and warned of continued flooding in low-lying areas.

In the northern Himalayan regions of Jammu and Kashmir and Himachal Pradesh, torrential rain triggered flash floods and landslides that damaged roads, disrupted public transport and cut off several villages.

Emergency crews were deployed to evacuate stranded residents.

India’s annual southwest monsoon, which runs from June through September, is critical for agriculture and replenishing water supplies but also causes widespread flooding and landslides each year, particularly in the Himalayan region and ­densely populated cities with inadequate drainage. — AP

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

Others Also Read