DHAKA, June 14 (Xinhua) -- Landslides in Bangladesh's hilly southeastern region have killed at least 125 people and damaged hundreds of homes, said an official Wednesday.
Heavy rains since Monday morning swept through Bangladesh's three southeastern districts -- Chittagong, Bandarban and Rangamati -- and triggered huge landslides early Tuesday.
Disaster Management Ministry official GM Abdul Quader said that they received highest casualty information from Rangamati district, some 391 km from capital Dhaka.
"88 bodies have so far been recovered in the Ranganati district," said Quader who supervises the Disaster Ministry control room in Dhaka.
He said 37 more deaths have been reported from Bandarban, some 316 km away of capital Dhaka, and Chittagong district, 242 km southeast of Dhaka.
He said rescuers pulled at least 30 bodies out from the mud and earth in Chittagong while seven people were killed due to landslides in the country's southeastern Bandarban district.
Scores of people were hurt and some people including a soldier still remained missing.
Officials said the Rangamati death toll included four members of Bangladesh Army including two of its officers.
Inter Service Public Relations (ISPR) of Bangladesh Army said 10 more army personnel were also injured in the incident while another still remained missing.
Lieutenant Colonel Md Rashidul Hasan, director of ISPR, told Xinhua that army personnel died while they were working to clear a road in a worst landslide hit area in Rangamati district.
Rangamati Police Chief Sayeed Tarikul Hassan told Xinhua that rescue operation is still underway.
He said flood caused by the incessant rain inundated many areas of the Rangamati since Monday.
Rescue teams, using shovels and bare hands, are still searching for more bodies under tons of mud and debris, he said.
But rescue operations were delayed due to bad weather.
The Chittagong Hill Tracts saw over 300 mm of rainfalls in the 24 hours till Tuesday morning.
Tens of thousands of people have been displaced after unusually heavy rain on Monday triggered a string of mudslides.
Landslides are frequent in Bangladesh's hilly areas during the heavy monsoon that usually runs from June to September as land has been heavily deforested to grow crops and build new houses.
In June 2007, some 123 people were killed in a devastating landslide in Bangladesh's southeastern Chittagong district, some 242 km away of Dhaka.