At least 24 dead in Bangladesh from tropical storm

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
officials and news reports said Tuesday.The government said about 10,000 homes were damaged and more than 6,000 hectares (15,000 acres) of
crops were destroyed
Thousands of fishing projects were also washed away.The United News of Bangladesh news agency said about 20,000 people were marooned because
of flooding triggered by tidal surges in the southern coastal district of Bhola.Tropical Storm Sitrang brewed in the Bay of Bengal before
Heavy rains battered the country throughout the day, flooding many areas in the coastal regions across southern and southwestern
Bangladesh.The storm weakened Tuesday afternoon, with maximum sustained wind speeds of 65 kilometers (40 miles) per hour and wind gusts up
to 85 kph (53 mph)
The weather office in the capital, Dhaka, which had recorded gusts up to 88 kph (55 mph) Monday evening, said the danger had passed.No
flooding or major damage was reported in camps housing about 30,000 ethnic Rohingya refugees on Bhasan Char island and another 1 million in
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslims fled from neighboring Buddhist-majority
Myanmar security forces were accused of mass rapes, killings and torching thousands of homes owned by Rohingya.A government official in
Mirshorai in Chattogram, Minhazur Rahman, said divers found eight bodies on Tuesday after a dredger capsized in the Bay of Bengal on Monday
night
The sea remained rough on Tuesday, he said.Raihan Mehbub, an official in Cumilla district, said two parents and their 4-year-old daughter
died after a tree fell on their home while they were sleeping late Monday night.At least 13 others died in separate incidents across the
country, Dhaka-based Somoy TV reported
Most died after being hit by falling trees, though others died because of collapsing structures or drowning, local media reported.Nasrul
Hamid, junior minister for power and mineral resources, said about 8 million out of a total of 48 million users remained without electricity
after falling trees damaged distribution lines or electric poles were knocked over, mostly in rural areas.He said power distribution across
the country would not be normalized until Wednesday.Enamur Rahman, junior minister for disaster management and relief, said about 10,000
homes were damaged or destroyed across the country.Authorities reopened three airports on Tuesday after suspending their operations for 21
hours.On Monday, the government halted operations of all river vessels across the country, closed the three airports and asked fishing boats
to return from the deep sea and remain anchored in the Bay of Bengal.Bangladesh is a delta nation of more than 160 million people and is
prone to natural disasters such as floods and cyclones.Climate scientists say climate change is a factor behind many natural disasters in
Bangladesh and other South Asian nations.Source: AP--Agencies
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