At least 18 Rohingya, most of them children, were killed by landslides triggered by record rainfall in Cox's Bazar, local authorities said on Wednesday, as conditions in refugee camps are deteriorating amid decreasing humanitarian support.
About 1.3 million Rohingya shelter in 33 camps in the coastal district of southeastern Bangladesh, turning it into the world's largest refugee settlement. It is also one of the most climate-vulnerable ones.
The Chattogram region, of which Cox's Bazar is a part, recorded on Tuesday the highest rainfall in the last four decades — over 412 millimeters in 24 hours — according to Bangladesh's met office data.
In the camp area, the ground is waterlogged and hillsides unstable, resulting in more than 200 landslides and flash floods, which since Monday have destroyed thousands of shelters and infrastructure, especially in the hilly camps of Ukhiya and Teknaf.
At least eight children were killed on Wednesday alone when a landslide struck a mosque and madrassa in Ukhiya.
"A retaining wall collapsed due to heavy rainfall. We heard that a teacher was also among the casualties. Rescue operations are underway," Sanwar Hossain, senior assistant secretary at the Refugee, Relief and Repatriation Commission in Cox's Bazar, told Arab News.
At least 30 people have been killed as heavy monsoon rains have continued and caused landslides in the hilly southeastern districts in Bangladesh since Sunday, the disaster minister told the parliament on Thursday.
Disaster Management and Relief Minister Asadul Habib Dulu told the National Parliament that the ongoing heavy rains across the country, particularly in the southeastern Chattogram division, have caused the deaths of 30 people.
The highest 19 deaths occurred in coastal Cox's Bazar, where about 1.2 million Rohingya have been taking shelter since August 2017 after fleeing a military crackdown in Myanmar.
He also said that shelter centers have already been opened in the affected areas to deal with the disaster.
"Metallic Taste? Climate engineering nanoparticle contamination. Medical doctor / pilot sounds the alarm to Shasta County, California, officials. “As a doctor, I can tell you, there's been about a 25% increase in lung problems in this area, and in most areas that they're spraying. Secondly, I concur about the increased number of Alzheimer's. They have since been able to take the aluminum and micronize it, which means it'll stay up longer, but it also means, and I don't know if any of you have noticed some metallic taste in your mouth when they're spraying, but you inhale that. It goes up through your cribriform plate, and then through your sinuses, and into the brain.” Geoengineering is nothing less than weather / biological warfare, do you object?" on 'X' [Link]
Comment: Update July 9
Anadolu Ajansı reports: