Sunday, August 12, 2012

13 DIE AS LIGHTNING STRIKES BANGLADESH MOSQUE


DHAKA, Bangladesh - At least 13 Muslim worshippers were killed and 15 hurt when lightning struck a mosque in a remote village in northeast Bangladesh as they held special Ramadan prayers, police said on Saturday.
The imam was among those instantly killed when a lightning bolt hit the tin-and-thatch building at Saraswatipur village, about 200 kilometres (125 miles) from the capital Dhaka, late on Friday.
The lightning appeared to "electrify" the mosque after hitting a rooftop microphone being run on power from a car battery, local council member Abul Kalam told AFP by telephone.
  • About 35 people from the village in the lake district of Sunamganj were holding prayers known as taraweeh - offered during the holy fasting month of Ramadan - at the time, police chief Bayes Alam said.
  • Villagers rushed to help after hearing cries, Alam said.
  • "It was a terrible scene. Dozens were lying on the floor - some dead, others writhing in pain," he said, adding most of the victims were young men in their 20s and 30s.
  • "We took the injured in three boats and headed to hospital in Dharmapasa", the closest big town, he said. "But it took hours to get there," he added.
  • Lightning is a major threat in Sunamganj, home to some of Bangladesh's biggest lakes. Most lightning strikes occur during the monsoon season between June and September when the district receives huge amounts of rainfall.
Bangladeshi environmentalists blame global warming, which has unleashed a growing number of tropical storms, for the increase in the frequency, devastation and deaths caused by lightning strikes in recent years.
In May last year, at least 29 people were killed. Most of them farmers who were harvesting rice and dozens injured when a series of lightning strikes hit several districts in a single day.
Source: AFP, Reuter

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