Relentless monsoon rains and flooding have stranded nearly three million people in Bangladesh and killed three, submerging vast areas and damaging homes and infrastructure, officials from the country's disaster management ministry said on Thursday.
The Flood Forecasting and Warning Centre (FFWC) has warned that with the rains continuing, water levels could rise further over the next 24 hours, raising concern about additional flooding and displacement.
The weather department on Tuesday said the heavy rains were the result of a low-pressure area persisting over central parts of Bangladesh and the neighbouring region.
Road connectivity in several regions were severed, isolating communities and hampering relief efforts, disaster management and relief officials said.
The most affected districts in Bangladesh included Feni, Moulvibazar, Habiganj, Comilla and Chittagong, where five major rivers were flowing above danger levels, the FFWC said.
"I haven't seen so much water in the last 20 years. Everything in my house is wrecked because the water has risen to waist level," said Mohammad Masum, a resident of Feni district.
An analysis in 2015 by the World Bank Institute estimated that 3.5 million people in Bangladesh, one of the world's most climate-vulnerable countries, were at risk of annual river flooding. Scientists attribute the exacerbation of such catastrophic events to climate change.
Late on Wednesday, students in Dhaka held protest rallies, alleging that the floods were caused by the opening of dam sluice gates in neighbouring India.
India's foreign ministry said it was "not correct" that the floods were caused by water released from the Dumbur dam on the Gumti River in the northeastern state of Tripura.
"We would like to point out that the catchment areas of Gumti River that flows through India and Bangladesh have witnessed the heaviest rains of this year over the last few days," the ministry said in a statement on Thursday.
"The flood in Bangladesh is primarily due to waters from these large catchments downstream of the dam."
Reuters TV showed Bangladesh residents evacuating with their belongings by boat and other makeshift transportation as knee-deep water entered their homes.
In Tripura, 12 people have died due to landslides and floods triggered by the incessant rain of the past three days, Suman Deb, a Indian disaster management official, told Reuters.
"The impact has been devastating and rescue operations are ongoing," Deb said.
India's interior minister, Amit Shah, said in a post on X that the federal government has rushed disaster management teams, apart from boats and helicopters, to Tripura to assist the state government in relief and rescue operations.
"Floods on the common rivers between India and Bangladesh are a shared problem inflicting sufferings to people on both sides, and requires close mutual cooperation towards resolving them," India's foreign ministry said.
Social media in Bangladesh, meanwhile, went abuzz with some users accusing India of causing the floods.
"India has created an artificial flood in Bangladesh by releasing water from its dams and you still wonder why people hate India so much?" said a user on X.
"For the first time in generations, Bangladesh's entire southeastern region is facing its worst flooding in history affecting millions of people. The cause? Indian authorities opened the gates of the Dumbur Reservoir in Tripura for the first time in three decades, releasing massive volumes of water into an already rain-soaked region," said another user.
"Could there have been flooding without India opening the Dumbur Reservoir gates? Perhaps yes, but on a significantly smaller scale. The sudden release of water from the dam has inundated the region to an extent it hasn't experienced in generations," the user added.
Others users called out the false information being shared online even by people working for international organisations.