Tag: Bangladesh

  • 14 people died in a head-on collision between a truck and a pickup van

    14 people died in a head-on collision between a truck and a pickup van

    Dhaka (IANS) | A truck and a pickup van collided head-on in Bangladesh’s Sylhet district on Wednesday. 14 people died and 12 others were injured in this accident. A senior police officer gave this information. Inspector Mohammad Abul Hussain of Sylhet’s South Surma police station told Xinhua news agency that all the dead were labourers. The incident took place around 6 am, the official said.

    According to the official, all the injured were admitted to local hospitals for treatment. Police is investigating the accident.

    Road accidents are increasing in Bangladesh mainly due to dilapidated highways, poorly maintained vehicles, violation of traffic rules by the drivers and lack of monitoring by the traffic department. That’s why the death rate is highest here.

    According to media reports, at least 328 people have been killed and 565 others injured in 304 road accidents from April 15 to April 29 during the Eid-ul-Fitr festival in Bangladesh.

    –IANS

  • Cyclone Mocha makes landfall along Bangladesh, Myanmar coasts

    Cyclone Mocha makes landfall along Bangladesh, Myanmar coasts

    DHAKA: Super cyclone Mocha made landfall along the Myanmar-Bangladesh coasts on Sunday after intensifying into the equivalent of a category-five storm, a senior Met official said. The powerful made landfall shortly after midday on the Teknaf shorelines before making its way through the Naf River that divides Bangladesh and Myanmar.

    “The ‘eye’ or the centre point of the cyclone made its landfall shortly after midday today on the Teknaf shorelines, coming through the Naf River, ahead of its anticipated time,” Bangladesh Met office spokesman AKM Nazmul Huda told PTI.

    He said the tail or the rest part of the severe storm, which was categorised as a very dangerous category-five cyclone, might take more time to cross the coastlines. Administrative chief of Teknaf sub-district of Bangladesh’s southeastern Cox’s Bazar Mohammad Quamruzzaman said the wind was blowing at a speed of over 200 kilometres per hour in Taknaf and its southernmost part Shahpori Dip along the Bay of Bengal. Teknaf is close to Myanmar and separated from northern Myanmar coasts by the Naf River.

    “The weather is frightening because of the very high velocity of wind but we are yet to see the much-feared massive tidal surges,” Quamruzzaman said.

    The weather officials said the Naf River was currently witnessing high tides that began at 11 am and would continue until 5 PM (local time).

    The officials and residents in Cox’s Bazar said cyclone Mocha was bringing with it heavy rain and winds of up to 195kph and feared it may lead to dangerous flooding in areas around the Bay of Bengal.

    Storm surges of up to four metres could swamp villages in low-lying areas. There are fears it may hit the world’s largest refugee camp, Cox’s Bazar, where over one million displaced Muslim Rohingya refugees live in makeshift camps.

    Earlier, the Bangladesh Met Office issued the highest danger signal 10 for Cox’s Bazar.

    Cyclone Mocha started hitting the coastlines of Bangladesh and Myanmar on Sunday after intensifying into the equivalent of a category-five storm.

    The powerful cyclone brought heavy rain and winds of up to 195 kph.

    The forecast was it will make landfall with heavy rains and winds on Sunday afternoon.

    The low-lying areas of Cox’s Bazar and Chattogram are likely to be inundated by wind-driven tidal surges eight to 12 feet above normal.

    Tidal surges of five to seven feet above normal are also likely to deluge low-lying parts of Feni, Noakhali, Laxmpur, Chandpur, and Bhola, bdnews24.com reported.

    Meteorologists previously warned Mocha could be the most powerful storm seen in Bangladesh in nearly two decades.

    Around 500,000 people have been evacuated to safer areas by the Bangladesh government.

    As part of its preparation, Bangladesh shut nearby airports, ordered fisherfolks to suspend their work and set up 1,500 shelters as people from vulnerable areas were moved to safer spots.

    Officials said the government, with the support of UN agencies and aid workers, has kept tonnes of dry food and dozens of ambulances ready with mobile medical teams in sprawling camps of the Rohingyas who fled to Bangladesh from Myanmar.

    Residents and officials fear the Mocha-triggered tidal surges could cause massive deluges and landslides, endangering the lives of those residing in hillside camps, where mudslides hit regularly.

    The World Meteorological Organisation, a United Nations agency, has warned the super cyclone will cause heavy rain, flooding, and landslides around the coasts of Bangladesh and Myanmar.

  • B’desh won’t buy from countries that impose sanctions: Sheikh Hasina

    B’desh won’t buy from countries that impose sanctions: Sheikh Hasina

    DHAKA: Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has said that Bangladesh will not purchase anything from countries that impose sanctions against it. The prime minister made the remarks on Saturday when inaugurating the 60th convention of the Institution of Engineers, Bangladesh (IEB) in Dhaka, Xinhua news agency reported.

    “There is now a tendency to impose sanctions, and sanctions on those by whom we contain terrorism. We have made a decision. I have said that I will not buy anything from those who will impose sanctions,” said the prime minister.

    Hasina had earlier slammed the US sanctions on officials of Bangladesh’s special security force unit Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) over alleged rights abuse, saying the move was “very condemnable act.”

    She said the elite force has immensely contributed to the South Asian country’s efforts in containing militancy and terrorism.

    In December 2021, the US Departments of Treasury and the Department of State imposed human rights-related sanctions on the RAB and its seven incumbent and former top officials.

    –IANS

  • Bengal Farmer, Who Mistakenly Entered Into Bangladesh, Returns Home After 15 Months

    Bengal Farmer, Who Mistakenly Entered Into Bangladesh, Returns Home After 15 Months

    Nasir Seikh, a resident of Brahmanagar in Chapra police station area, entered the Bangladeshi territory by mistake while working on farmland, and was apprehended by the Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB), they said.

    Many areas at the international border between the two countries do not have fencing, and people of both sides often crossover into each other’s territory unintentionally, they added.

    Seikh said he was handed over to the police by the BGB and subsequently produced before a court, which sent him to jail for 2 months. However, due to several complications, he had to remain there for around 15 months and could only return home after the Indian High Commission in Bangladesh intervened.

    He was handed over to the BSF by the BGB at the Gede check post. His brother Siraj Seikh went to the check post along with a local panchayat member to receive him.

    “I am feeling good that I could return home after 15 months. I received good behaviour during my stay in Bangladesh,” he said.

    He has four children, while his wife died about seven years back.

    His brother Siraj said, “Nasir is the eldest of our seven brothers. He used to work as a farm labourer. He has three sons and a daughter, who have been living like orphans after his arrest. We are happy for his return.”

  • Lightning kills nine in Bangladesh

    Lightning kills nine in Bangladesh

    Dhaka (IANS) | A series of lightning struck Bangladesh in less than two hours amid heavy rains, killing nine people. Officials gave this information on Monday. The deaths were reported from different areas of Sunamganj, Maulvibazar and Sylhet districts between 10 am and 11 am on Sunday, Xinhua news agency reported.

    Most of the deaths occurred in rural areas where people were working on their farms.

    Reports of deaths from lightning are common in the densely populated country during this time of year.

    Bangladesh has seen an increase in deaths due to lightning strikes, with hundreds of deaths recorded annually over the past few years.

    Experts claim that this is due to climate change. Bangladesh is more sensitive in this matter.

    –IANS

  • Bus accident in Bangladesh, 17 killed, 30 injured

    Bus accident in Bangladesh, 17 killed, 30 injured

    Dhaka: At least 17 people were killed and more than 26 others injured when a passenger bus veered off the road and fell into a ditch in Bangladesh’s central Madaripur district, nearly 63 km south of the capital Dhaka on Sunday.

    Abdullahel Baki, a local Shibchar Highway Police official, told reporters that “the passenger bus felt into a roadside ditch, leaving 14 passengers dead on the spot and about 25-26 were injured”.

    He said three of the injured died on the way to local hospitals, Xinhua news agency reported.

    The accident occurred as its driver lost control over the vehicle and plunged the bus into a ditch on an expressway at about 7:30 a.m. local time.

    Bangladesh has one of the highest fatality rates for road accidents in the world mainly due to shoddy highways, poorly maintained vehicles, violation of traffic rules by inept drivers and lack of monitoring of the traffic department.