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Princh Mondal Olif, Bagerhat District Correspondent:
Continuous
heavy rainfall for four consecutive days has caused widespread waterlogging
across Bagerhat district, submerging more than 7,000 fish farms. Shrimp and
various freshwater fish have escaped from the flooded enclosures, leaving
thousands of fish farmers facing heavy financial losses estimated at hundreds
of crores of taka.
According to
preliminary information from the Department of Fisheries, the worst-affected
areas are Fakirhat, Chitalmari, Mollahat, Mongla, Rampal and Morelganj
upazilas. Continuous rainfall raised water levels in rivers, canals and
low-lying areas, causing embankments around fish farms to collapse. As a
result, shrimp, rohu, catla, mrigal and other fish escaped into open water.
Affected
farmers said they had invested in fish farming with loans from banks and NGOs. However,
the unexpected flooding has washed away a large part of their investment,
leaving many worried about repaying their loans.
Fish farmer
Kazi Mirajul Islam from Fakirhat said, "The water inside my fish farm rose
to knee level. We tried to save the fish by installing nets and using water
hyacinth, but most of the fish eventually escaped."
A farmer
from Mollahat said he lost fish worth millions of taka after two large fish
farms, along with several nearby farms, were submerged. Similar reports of
heavy losses have also come from Chitalmari, Rampal and Mongla.
Meanwhile,
many local residents have been catching fish with traditional nets from the
flooded areas, adding to the losses suffered by fish farmers.
After
visiting the affected areas, local leaders urged the government to provide
emergency financial assistance, waive interest on bank loans, suspend NGO loan
repayments and introduce rehabilitation support for the affected farmers.
The District
Fisheries Officer said the department is assessing the extent of the damage.
Farmers have also been advised to strengthen and raise the embankments around
fish farms and improve drainage systems to reduce future losses.
Local
residents believe that unless the affected farmers receive immediate
rehabilitation support, easy loans and effective disaster management
assistance, fish production in the district could decline significantly in the
coming season. They also warn that the increasing frequency of such disasters
due to climate change poses a serious threat to Bagerhat's fisheries-based
economy.