Published: 18:35, August 30, 2024
2m children at risk as worst floods in decades hit eastern Bangladesh
By Xinhua
People wade through flood waters after collecting relief materials in Feni, in south-eastern Bangladesh, on August 24, 2024. Nearly 300,000 Bangladeshis were taking refuge in emergency shelters on August 24 from floods that inundated vast areas of the low-lying South Asian country, disaster officials said. (PHOTO / AFP)

DHAKA - Over 2 million children in eastern Bangladesh are at risk as floods sweep through homes, schools and villages, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) has warned.

In all, these floods, the worst in eastern Bangladesh in 34 years, have affected 5.6 million people, UNICEF said here in a statement Friday.

Major rivers in the southeast are overflowing due to unprecedented monsoon rains. As a result, more than 52 people have been reported dead.

Over 500,000 people are seeking shelter, after rising waters from swollen rivers submerged homes, streets and fields in Chattogram and Sylhet areas.

Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) personnel treat a child at a free medical camp for flood affected people in Daganbhuiyan on August 25, 2024. (PHOTO / AFP)

Millions of children and families are stranded without food and emergency relief supplies. Government personnel and volunteers are conducting rescue operations, though access remains difficult in some areas. In the coming days, more people will be affected as the monsoon season continues.

ALSO READ: 23 dead, nearly 6m affected by floods in Bangladesh

"The devastating floods in the eastern parts of Bangladesh are a tragic reminder of the relentless impact of extreme weather events and the climate crisis on children. Far too many children have lost loved ones, their homes, schools, and now are completely destitute," said Emma Brigham, Deputy Representative of UNICEF Bangladesh.

"UNICEF is on the frontlines providing water purification tablets, oral rehydration salts and other essential supplies, but more funds are needed to reach these children and prevent an even more devastating impact on their futures," the deputy representative added.

A family uses a makeshift raft to make their way through the flood waters in Daganbhuiyan in Feni, on August 25, 2024. River waters in low-lying Bangladesh are receding after days of deadly floods but 300,000 people are still in emergency shelters requiring aid, disaster officials said on August 25. (PHOTO / AFP)

The recent floods came close on the heels of the floods in north Bangladesh and Cyclone Remal in May. Jointly, the three emergencies have impacted over 13 million people across Bangladesh, including 5 million children, according to the statement.

Climate change increases the frequency, severity and unpredictability of cyclones, floods and other extreme weather events affecting Bangladesh, underscoring that the climate crisis is fundamentally a child rights crisis, according to the UNICEF.

READ MORE: Bangladesh floods maroon nearly three million people, kill two

According to the UNICEF Children's Climate Risk Index, children in Bangladesh are the most exposed in the world to climate and environmental hazards.