Heavy rains have caused widespread flooding in parts of Bangladesh and India, leaving millions stranded and at least 57 dead.
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In Bangladesh, about 2 million people have been marooned by the worst floods in the country’s north-east for nearly two decades.
At least 100 villages at Zakiganj were inundated after floodwater rushing from India’s north-east breached a major embankment on the Barak River, said Mosharraf Hossain, the chief government administrator of the Sylhet region.
“Some two million people have been stranded by floods so far,” he said on Saturday.
Many parts of Bangladesh and neighbouring regions in India are prone to flooding, and experts say climate change is increasing the likelihood of extreme weather events around the world.
Dozens of people were killed in India during the week in days of flooding, landslides and thunderstorms, according to local disaster management authorities.
In Assam state, which borders Bangladesh, at least 14 people died in landslides and floods.
Assam authorities said on Saturday that more than 850,000 people in about 3,200 villages had been affected by the floods, triggered by torrential rains that submerged swathes of farmland and damaged thousands of homes.
Nearly 90,000 people have been moved to state-run relief shelters as water levels in rivers run high and large swathes of land remain submerged in most districts.
West of Assam, at least 33 people were killed in Bihar state in thunderstorms.
More than three dozen people were injured in the unseasonal weather events that damaged hundreds of hectares of standing crops and thousands of fruit trees.
Bihar has also suffered an intense heatwave this week, with temperatures reaching 40C. ■
A clipper system will move quickly across the northern Plains into the Midwest Friday and the Northeast by Saturday, bringing a wintry mix of rain and snow showers ahead of a sweeping cold front.