DHAKA, May 26 (Xinhua) --
Rescuers continued efforts to search for the people missing in Monday's Cyclone
Aila after it slammed into Bangladesh's southern coastal region and claimed at
least 91 lives.
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Cyclone victims inspect the damage to their house at
Patharpatima Island in the Sundarbans delta, about 100 km (62 miles) south
from the eastern Indian city of Kolkata, May 26, 2009. Nearly 120 people
have been killed by Cyclone Aila that ripped through Bangladesh and
eastern India including the Sundarbans, which is home to the world's largest tiger reserve, officials
and local media said on Tuesday, while millions remained marooned by
floodwaters or living in shelters. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
Officials of the country's Food and Disaster
Management Ministry said on Tuesday that 91 people were confirmed dead while
more than 800 others were injured and 260 millions affected.
However, local media put the death toll up to 130 on
Tuesday evening, fearing that the figure might go up with the unveiling of
detail pictures of death and destruction from the remote islands, some in the
Bay of Bengal.
Officials and residents in the affected region feared
that many people might have been washed away by the surge. They said it may take
couple of days to get a clear picture of death and destruction.
The private news agency bdnews24.com, quoting local
administrations, said over 100 people are still missing.
This was the biggest natural calamity in Bangladesh
after cyclone Sidr battered the country's southwestern coastal belt on Nov. 15,
2007, leaving thousands of people dead or missing.
Thousands of thatched houses in the country's coastal
area were washed away and hundreds of thousands of islanders marooned by 10-13
feet (3-4 meters) high surge, officials said.
The country's southwestern Satkhira and Khulna districts and
southeastern Noakhali district are the most-affected area.
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Flood-affected people move to safer places after receiving relief supplies
on the outskirts of Siliguri in the eastern Indian state of
West Bengal, May 26, 2009. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
In southeastern Noakhali
district, local police chief of Hatia sub-district Abdul Rob said structures on
an offshore island Nijhum Dwip, which is under the Hatia sub-district and has a population of some 20,000
people, were almost completely damaged by the tide surge.
There are about 40,000 to 50,000 deer on the
south-most island in Bay of Bengal, he said, "But we don't know what's the fate
of the animals."
Food and Disaster Management Minister Abdur Razzak on
Tuesday evening told reporters here that 470,000 families were affected by the
cyclone that also damaged a total of 509 km embankments, flooding the low-lying
offshore islands.
He said 12.3 million taka (about 175,714 U.S.
dollars) cash and2,500 tons of rice were dispatched to the cyclone-hit region.
The minister said since they have adequate relief
goods in stock the government will not seek international help.
A release of the Inter-Service Public Relation, press
wing of the armed forces, on Tuesday night said the army has been distributing
food, medicine and pure water among the affected people. Some 20 naval ships are
pressed into rescue operations.
However, officials said the salvage operation in inaccessible and remote areas was being hampered
by the rough sea.
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A Bangladeshi villager carries his
belongings through flood waters in the village Sathkhira, some 400 kms
from Dhaka, May 26, 2009. (Xinhua/AFP Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
The tidal surge triggered by the cyclone also washed
away crops, cattle heads and wild life like spotted deer in the coastal region.
Sultan ul Islam, official of the control room under
the food ministry told Xinhua some 58,950 animals died in the cyclone which also
hit state of West Bengal of India.
On Nov. 15, 2007, a devastating cyclone Sidr battered
Bangladesh 's southern and southwestern coastal areas leaving thousands of
people dead or missing.