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Low-lying areas of some nothern districts deluged

August 27, 2023 00:00:00


A woman and a child wade through flood water to go to a safer place. The photo was taken from Mahishkhocha in Aditmari of Lalmonirhat on Saturday — Focus Bangla

FE REPORT

Low-lying areas of some northern districts have been inundated due to incessant rainfall and onrush of water from upstream, causing concern for Aman farmers.

However, Sarder Udoy Raihan, duty officer and executive engineer of Flood Forecasting and Warning Centre, said the flood situation in Nilphamari, Lalmonirhat and Rangpur districts adjacent to Teesta basin might remain steady in next 24 hours starting from Saturday evening.

The Teesta river has been in a rising trend, which may remain steady in the next 24 hours, according to him.

Television footage showed thousands of people marooned in northern Rangpur districts due to heavy rainfall and an onrush of water from upstream.

In addition, as many as 50,000 people have been marooned in Rangpur on Saturday due to incessant rainfall, local media reported. Farmlands of different types of crops, including rice field, have been flooded, according to locals.

Citing different meteorological agencies, there is a chance of medium-to-heavy rainfall in the north-eastern and adjoining upstream parts of Bangladesh in next 48 hours.

For this reason, the Surma, Kushiyara, Someswari, Jadukata, Bhugai-Kangsha and Sarigowan rivers of the north-eastern region might rise at times during these periods, it said.

All the major rivers in the north-eastern region of the country are in a steady state, according to the centre.

The Brahmaputra-Jamuna river is in a rising trend while the Ganges-Padma is in a steady state, which may continue in the next 48 hours.

The Teesta is in a rising trend, which may remain steady in the next 24 hours, according to flood forecast.

Meanwhile UNB from Kurigram adds: Teesta river's water level has surged 41 cm above the danger mark in Kurigram district, while water levels of the Brahmaputra, Dudhkumar, and Dharla rivers are also on the rise.

The escalating water levels have instilled fears of potential flooding among the residents living along the riverbanks.

Kurigram Water Development Board has forecast short-term flooding.

According to the district's Water Development Board, Brahmaputra river's water level is currently 72 cm below the danger mark at the Nunkhawa point, 58 cm below the limit at the Chilmari point, and Dharla river's water level is 97 cm below the danger limit at the Kurigram Sadar point.

However, at Kaunia Point, Teesta river's water is surging 41 cm above the danger level.

Low-lying areas including Begumganj, Nayarhat, and Saheber Alga in the Ulipur upazila of the district have already been inundated due to the increased water levels.

Irrespective of whether the water level of the Teesta river rises or decreases, erosion stays persistent and the residents of the riverside areas run from rising waters all year round.

Md. Noor Alam, a resident of the Goraipia area near Teesta river, expressed his concerns about the rising water levels over the past few days, particularly for the paddy fields.

"Whether the water of the Teesta river rises or recedes, river erosion persists, and the year-round struggles of the Teesta Par community go unnoticed," he lamented.

Surman Ali from Khitab Khan village echoed the same and expressed distress over the continuous rain and rising water levels.

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"The incessant rainfall coupled with the rising Teesta water has submerged our lives again, along with our cattle," he said.

Abdullah Al Mamun, executive engineer of the Water Development Board, attributed the rising river water to heavy rainfall in India's Assam and Arunachal.

He said that the onrush of hill water and heavy rainfall in the region have caused the Teesta river's water level to surpass the danger level. He also said that Brahmaputra river's water might reach the danger mark in the coming days.

While the forecast predicts short-term floods in certain areas of the district, including some unions of Ulipur and Chilmari upazilas, Mamun said that despite the water crossing danger levels, a major flood event is not likely to occur.

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