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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Bangladesh navy searches for 81 still missing after Mora cyclone

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DHAKA: Bangladesh’s navy was searching for 81 fishermen still missing on Thursday after more than 63 were rescued from the Bay of Bengal following a devastating cyclone which killed several people and left thousands homeless.


“Still 81 fishermen are missing out of 144 fishermen. Bangladesh Naval Force have rescued 33 and Indian Naval Force rescued 30,” said Mostaque Ahmed, head of the Cox’s Bazar Mechanized Fishing Boat Owners Association.


Cyclone Mora, with wind up to 135 kmph and heavy rain, hit southeast Bangladesh around Cox’s Bazaar and the border with neighbouring Myanmar on Tuesday, leaving thousands of Muslim Rohingya refugees hunkered down in ruined camps.


The Rohingyas have fled from their homes in northwest Myanmar to escape communal violence and Myanmar army crackdown.


The Bangladeshi government has estimated that in all, there are about 350,000 Rohingyas in Bangladesh following a new influx last October, when the Myanmar army launched an offensive in response to insurgent attacks.


Authorities in Cox’s Bazar and neighbouring Chittagong district evacuated 350,000 people from low-lying areas before the storm roared in from the Bay of Bengal on Tuesday.


“Though the fishermen were rescued, most of the boats, the main instrument for our survival are totally damaged and it is not possible to get them replaced quickly as we are not solvent,” Ahmed told Reuters by phone from Cox’s Bazar.


“Still we are grateful to the government as now the air force with helicopters is searching the remaining missing fishermen.”


Cyclone Mora formed after monsoon rains triggered floods and landslides in Sri Lanka, off India’s southern tip, killing 202 people in recent days, authorities said.


Meanwhile in neighbouring Sri Lanka, which has been hit by its worst flooding in 14 years, three people drowned on Thursday when their makeshift raft capsized.


Police said the victims, who included a mother and her 14-year-old son, had ignored official warnings not to venture outdoors because they had a funeral to attend.


The drownings in Nagoda in the country’s south follow the deaths of 203 people from last Friday’s heavy rains, most of them buried under landslides.


“We have appealed to the people not to go out to check their flooded homes without proper safety gear,” navy spokesman Chaminda Walakuluge said. “These are avoidable deaths.”


Among the 203 people killed were 45 schoolchildren, officials said. Another 95 are still listed as missing.


The Disaster Management Centre said the situation across the country was improving and thousands of security personnel were working on relief and recovery operations.


— Reuters/AFP


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