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With at least 20 landslides hitting it, southeastern Rangamati hill district was the worst affected and alone resulted in 105 deaths, including four army personnel who were doing rescue operations. Bandarban and Chittagong were the other two affected districts.
According to the officials, the death toll will rise further as many are still missing under tonnes of debris in southeastern hills.
Though officials confirmed only 129 deaths but media reports put the toll as high as 144 in nearly three days’ of torrential rains due to a depression in the Bay of Bengal which have triggered a series of landslides since Monday in the three districts.
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According to an official at the Disaster Management Ministry some 4,000 people were moved to 18 government shelters as the landslides ravaged their homes and were exposed to the danger of getting buried in fresh mudslides.
Officials feared that the death toll could rise as rescuers find it difficult to reach remote areas where telephone and transport links have remained cut. Local people said a landslide pushed 15 army men down to around 30 feet, killing four instantly while a military spokesman in Dhaka said an army major and a captain were among four of their dead personnel.
The officials said the troops were called out to clear the landslide rubble from a highway linking port city of Chittagong with Rangamati. “A fresh landslide at the scene buried the detachment killing the four while one soldier is still missing. Ten personnel were wounded in the (fresh) landslide,” he said.
Many of the victims belonged to the ethnic minority or tribal groups who live in makeshift structures along the hills in Bandarban and Rangamati where power cuts and no road connection have enhanced miseries of the residents, officials said.
At least 33 deaths were reported from the port city of Chittagong which witnessed five landslides while the rest of the casualties were reported from neighbouring Bandarban district where the torrential rains triggered three landslides.
Authorities temporarily halted the rescue campaign at around 10 last night after recovering 129 bodies. Specialised teams of fire servicemen and troops were mobilised to launch afresh the salvage drive.
“We need to accomplish a crucial task of resuming Chittagong’s road communications with Bandarban and Rangamati and Bandarban alongside salvaging the landslide victims,” a Disaster Management official told reporters. Densely populated Bangladesh is battered by storms, floods and landslides every rainy season but this year’s rain is the worst since 2007 when landslides killed 127 people in the port city.
The incessant rains caused water-logging in many parts of Chittagong and submerged a number of coastal villages apart from triggering the landslides. “The situation forced us to demolish a protection embankment against tidal surges as it appeared to be obstructing drainage inundating homes and roads,” an official of the city corporation said.
Experts and environmentalists attributed the latest spell of landslides to illegal mining in hills which exposed them to quick erosion during rains. The three southeastern hill districts of Ragamati, Bandarban and Khagrachhari known as Chittagong hill tracts received over 300mm of rainfall in the 24 hours till yesterday.
Meteorologists said the port city of Chittagong alone experienced 222 mm of rainfall during the same period calling the huge quantum of downpour in such a short time to be unusual. The landslides triggered by the monsoon rains came two weeks after Cyclone Mora hit Bangladesh, leaving eight people dead and damaging hundreds of homes.