CHITTAGONG, Bangladesh - Mudslides, flooding and lightning strikes killed 108 people and left scores missing in Bangladesh as annual monsoons washed away shanties and inundated cities, officials said Tuesday.
The worst-hit area was the hilly port city of Chittagong, where large chunks of earth slid off the soaked hillsides, burying dozens of crudely built shacks. At least 97 of the deaths were reported there, city official Nur Sulaiman said.
More than 50 others were reported missing in the shantytown, which is located near a military area, he added.
The heaviest recorded rainfall levels in seven years have also inundated parts of the capital, Dhaka, and other regions.
Bangladesh, a low-lying delta nation of 150 million people, is buffeted by cyclones and floods that kill hundreds each year. A powerful cyclone in 1991 killed 139,000 people.
Densely populated and grindingly poor, the country is filled with slums that are particularly vulnerable -- the one hit in Chittagong was home to 700 people, most of them migrant workers and their families who lived in clusters of straw-and-bamboo or mud-and-tin shanties built on the slope of hill, survivors said.
Dulu Mia Munshi, a rickshaw puller, said he lost five family members, including his wife and two young sons.
"There was a sudden rush of mud and water, and our home was swept away," Munshi told The Associated Press by telephone from his hospital bed. Five other neighboring shanties on a slope were also washed away.
Munshi and his mother-in-law, who had left the hut minutes earlier, were the only survivors. Munshi was carried several feet away, and suffered a fractured pelvis and sprained ankles.
"My sons, aged 8 and 10, slept next to each other," he said, recalling the last time he saw his children.
Munshi had moved to Chittagong from the southern coastal district of Bhola in search of work almost 18 years ago.
Another victim, an 11-year-old-boy who gave his name only as Belal, said he lost his mother and two sisters.
"My mother asked me get some bricks to stop the rushing water from getting inside our house," Belal said at a military hospital where he was being treated for head and limb injuries. "As soon as I stepped outside, I was carried away by the swirling water -- and a huge chunk of earth buried our house."
The country's interim leader, Fakhruddin Ahmed, visited the worst-hit areas, the United News of Bangladesh news agency said. He went to a military hospital where 47 seriously injured victims were being treated and distributed emergency rations to survivors at an army-run relief shelter nearby.
"Our first task is to rescue, treat and help rehabilitate the affected people," Ahmed told reporters.
In Chittagong, army rescuers pulled at least 28 bodies from the debris on Tuesday and two bodies were recovered from a nearby pond, Sulaiman said. Another 67 bodies were recovered Monday.
Lightning strikes Monday killed 11 people in the neighboring districts of Cox's Bazar, Noakhali and Brahmmanbaria, the Food and Disaster Management Ministry said.
Many of the dead in Chittagong were buried in rows in hillside graveyards.
Many areas remained without power or water because of flooding in the city of 4 million, 135 miles southeast of Dhaka. Several roads remained covered in slippery sludge, and the ground floors of many houses were water-logged, residents said.
The rains, which had eased by late Monday, resumed in torrents early Tuesday, flooding parts of Chittagong anew. There were no immediate reports of new mudslides.
Nearly 8 1/2 inches fell in three hours Monday, the weather bureau said.
Authorities moved hundreds of people in vulnerable areas to shelters in concrete school buildings, rescue officials said.
Government and charity agencies distributed food and water to about 1,000 people left homeless by the calamity, the area's government administrator Mukhlesur Rahman said. Emergency workers had managed to rescue more than 50 injured people from the rubble.
Several factories in an industrial belt around the city were also flooded, stopping production and causing extensive damage to machinery. The city's telephone, TV and radio networks were also interrupted by flooding at transmission stations.