Arab News

Bangladesh­is pray for rain as heatstroke deaths rise

Heat wave has shut schools for 33 million Bangladesh­i children

- Shehab Sumon Dhaka

Thousands of Bangladesh­is have gathered in Dhaka to pray for rain in the middle of an extreme hot spell that has put health authoritie­s on heatstroke alert.

The weather across the region is usually hot across the region in April before the summer monsoon season, but this year temperatur­es have been unusually high, reaching 42 degrees Celsius in parts of Bangladesh.

The country has been on alert since last week, as the punishing heat wave has disrupted agricultur­e, raised the risk of health complicati­ons and forced schools to close for 33 million children. As the Bangladesh Meteorolog­ical Department renewed its warning that the heat wave is likely to persist during the weekend — or until a new notice is issued — thousands of people in Dhaka prayed on Wednesday and Thursday for relief. They gathered in city mosques and rural fields to pray for rain. “Special prayers for rain have been organized in many parts of Dhaka on Thursday. Thousands of people joined these prayers ... in addition to that, a special prayer for rain, which Muslims around the world have practiced since the days of the Prophet Muhammad, has taken place in many parts across the country,” Motiur Rahman Akand, spokespers­on of the Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami, the country’s largest religious political party, which organized the prayers, told Arab News.

“When there is a natural crisis, especially drought, which causes severe suffering for human beings and all other living creatures, people should seek help from the Almighty to get relief from this situation.” Hospitals were on high alert as at least 20 people died from heatstroke in the past five days alone.

“We have been preparing quite ahead for managing heat waverelate­d patients ... all the government health facilities are guided not

to admit any other patients unless it’s an emergency,” Dr. Moinul Ahsan, director of the hospital wing of the Directorat­e General of Health Services, told Arab News.

“We are on alert and monitoring the situation closely. Working-class people are suffering most amid this heat wave ... children, pregnant women and the elderly are also most vulnerable in this situation.” Bangladesh’s geography and low-lying delta topography make it particular­ly vulnerable to the adverse effects of climate change, and for the past two decades, the country has launched various environmen­tal schemes to mitigate the worsening situation.

Ranking among the 10 countries most prone to climate devastatio­n, Bangladesh has been recognized as a global leader in adaptation and resilience, and in 2005 was one of the first least-developed countries to launch a national adaptation program of action.

A report released in February by the Internatio­nal Centre for Climate Change and Developmen­t, a leading research institute in Dhaka, warned that Bangladesh is reaching the limit of its ability to adapt to extreme weather.

 ?? AFP ?? Muslims offer special prayers for rains in Dhaka on Wednesday. The punishing heat wave has disrupted agricultur­e and raised the risk of health complicati­ons.
AFP Muslims offer special prayers for rains in Dhaka on Wednesday. The punishing heat wave has disrupted agricultur­e and raised the risk of health complicati­ons.

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