3,000 fishermen feared killed by cyclone in Bangladesh's southwestern forest area
www.chinaview.cn 2007-11-25 21:34:01   Print

    DHAKA, Nov. 25 (Xinhua) -- A fishermen association Sunday claimed that some 3,000 fishermen were killed and 700 others went missing in Dublar Char in Bangladesh's southwest following cyclone Sidr that battered the country's coastal belt on Nov. 15.

    Dublar Char, which consists of six small islands, is situated on the southern tip of Bangladesh and it was the first point hit by cyclone Sidr. It is part of the country's southwestern Sundarbans, the world's largest mangrove forest covering nearly 6,000 square meters.

    Major (rtd) Zia Uddin, president of the Dublarchar Fishermen Group, made the remarks at a press conference in the southern Bagerhat district Sunday, 10 days after the cyclone disaster amidst general belief that the actual death toll must be higher than that of the official figure.

    Zia said some 30,000 people, most of them fishermen, came to cyclone shelters at Dublar Char on the fateful night, but due to lack of accommodation, some 10,000 to 12,000 people were shifted to different channels inside the Sundarbans mangrove forest.

    He said most of those people were killed by the storm.

    The government food and disaster ministry put the overall death toll at 3,061 while the armed forces division at 3,199 so far. Official figure of missing is around 2,000.

    The government's comment on Zia's claim was not immediately available.

    Meanwhile, forest officials Sunday recovered a corpse of Royal Bengal Tiger from a canal inside the Sundarbans, which is an abode of about 100,000 to 150,000 deer, 500 Royal Bengal Tigers and over100,000 monkeys and rare species of birds.

Editor: Bi Mingxin
Related Stories
UN increases assistance for cyclone victims
Bangladesh's shrimp sector faces $36 mln loss due to cyclone
Cyclone causes over $4 mln loss to fishery in Bangladesh
Toll in Bangladesh Cyclone rose to 3,199
Home World
  Back to Top