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WEATHER REPORT
Twelve killed in Bangladesh landslide
by Staff Writers
Chittagong, Bangladesh (AFP) July 1, 2011

At least 12 people were killed and more feared missing Friday after three days of heavy rain triggered landslides near a slum in Bangladesh's port city of Chittagong, police said.

The victims were buried by mud while they were sleeping in their tin-roofed shanty houses in the southeastern city's Lalkhan Bazaar slum, which lies at the bottom of a hill, local police chief Abu Zafar Mohammad Omar Faruq told AFP.

"We told them to evacuate Thursday after weather officials warned the heavy rains might cause landslides in the hilly areas. Some refused to leave their homes, they were buried by mud as they were sleeping this morning," he said.

"So far we have recovered 12 bodies including eight women and a child. We fear some bodies are still under mud," he said, adding that army, navy and fire officials had been deployed to conduct a rescue operation.

At least seven shanty houses in the slum were buried by the landslides and up to five more people are believed to be missing, said Chittagong fire chief Ruhul Amin.

"But the slum residents could not say exactly how many people were living in each of the houses," he added.

Heavy monsoon rains of around 132 millimetres (5.2 inches) in 24 hours triggered the landslides, police chief Faruq said, adding that hundreds of people living in tin shacks on the slopes had been moved to safer locations.

In June 2007, landslides triggered by the heaviest rain in Chittagong in recent years killed at least 130 people.

earlier related report
Nepal warns of repeat of 2008 flooding disaster
Kathmandu (AFP) July 1, 2011 - A Nepalese river that flooded in 2008 forcing millions of people to abandon their homes in neighbouring India is threatening to burst its banks again, authorities warned on Friday.

At least 60,000 people in Nepal lost their homes in the 2008 Saptakosi river flood, but the devastation was far worse in neighbouring India, where the government said around two and a half million people were affected.

Many victims are still living in temporary housing.

Nepalese authorities said Friday that workers were battling to stop the swollen river breaching its embankments using sandbags and netting after heavy monsoon rains pushed water levels dangerously high.

"This is similar to the incident in 2008, when the river overflowed due to the monsoon rains and breached the embankments," said local official Manik Lal Shrestha.

"Only this time round, the damage could be worse, because the breach is likely to appear further up from the barrage, and the population has also increased," he added.

Shrestha said more than 100,000 people living in eastern Nepal would be affected if the embankments burst, adding emergency services had been placed on high alert.

The two countries traded blame for the failure of flood defences in the aftermath of the 2008 disaster, with Indian officials saying their efforts to reinforce the barrages were thwarted by Nepal.

Under a 1954 agreement, Nepal allowed India to construct the series of dams and spurs on the Saptakosi, which lies 200 kilometres (125 miles) southeast of the capital Kathmandu and flows down into the Ganges.




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China natural disasters claim 279 lives in June
Beijing (AFP) July 1, 2011 - China said Friday that 279 people died in natural disasters in June and another 93 had gone missing, as the country was hit by floods, mudslides and earthquakes.

Summer downpours pummelled large swathes of south and central China last month, triggering the floods and landslides.

Earthquakes also rocked parts of the country, including the northwestern mountainous region of Yushu that had already been hit by a devastating quake in April last year, when nearly 2,700 died and more than 12,000 were injured.

The Ministry of Civil Affairs, which made public the June death toll, said more than two million people had also been evacuated.

It did not provide details as to what disasters triggered the most casualties, but in a statement published last month, it said torrential downpours had left more than 260 dead or missing.

China is hit by big summer rainfalls every year.

Heavy downpours across large swathes of the country last year triggered the nation's worst flooding in a decade, leaving more than 4,300 people dead or missing in floods, landslides and other rain-related disasters.

One devastating mudslide in the northwestern province of Gansu killed 1,500 people last August.

The National Meteorological Centre said Friday that rains in southern parts of China were expected to gradually weaken.





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WEATHER REPORT
Lightning strike kills 18 children in Uganda
Kampala (AFP) June 29, 2011
A lightning strike at a primary school in western Uganda killed 18 students and injured 50, Ugandan police said on Wednesday. Lightning on Tuesday hit Runyanya primary school in Kiryandongo district, about 225 kilometres (135 miles) northwest of Kampala, killing 15 girls and three boys, police spokeswoman Judith Nabakooba told AFP. "The injured were taken to hospital nearby and 15 of tho ... read more


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