The Denver Post

Millions displaced and dozens dead in India and Bangladesh

- By Karan Deep Singh and Saif Hasnat

NEW DELHI » Heavy pre-monsoon rains in India and Bangladesh have washed away train stations, towns and villages, leaving millions of people homeless as extreme weather events — including heat waves, intense rainfall and floods — become more common in South Asia.

More than 60 people have been killed in days of flooding, landslides and thundersto­rms that have left many people without food and drinking water and have isolated them by cutting off the internet, according to officials.

The devastatio­n in India’s northeast, one of the worst affected regions, has submerged railway tracks, bridges and roads. In the remote state of Assam, 31 of its 33 districts have been affected by floods, impacting the lives of more than 700,000 people, officials said Saturday. At least 18 people have died in the state because of floods and landslides, according to news reports.

At least 33 people were killed in the neighborin­g state of Bihar by lightning strikes and heavy rain in its 16 districts, Nitish Kumar, chief minister, said Friday.

Climate scientists have said

India and Bangladesh are vulnerable to climate change because of their proximity to the warm tropical waters of the Indian Ocean and the Bay of Bengal, which are increasing­ly experienci­ng heat waves. The rising sea temperatur­es have led to “a significan­t increase in rainfall” in some areas, according to the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorolog­y in Pune.

On Sunday, India’s meteorolog­ical department warned of “thundersto­rms with lightning and very heavy rainfall” in many parts of the northeast where the Brahmaputr­a river has inundated vast areas of agricultur­al land, villages and towns over the past couple weeks.

The floodwater­s have arrived with fury in Bangladesh, a lowlying nation of about 170 million people.

About 2 million people have been affected in the Sylhet region, in the country’s east, officials said.

“We haven’t seen such a widespread flood in Sylhet for around two decades,” said S.M. Shahidul Islam, a chief engineer of the Bangladesh Water Developmen­t Board.

At least 10 people have been killed in the region, officials said. “We still are working to see if there are more casualties,” said Mosharraf Hossain, the top official in the region.

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