A man wades through a flooded street in Bago township in Myanmar's Bago region
A man wades through a flooded street in Bago township in Myanmar's Bago region on August 12, 2023. Image Credit: AFP

Bago: A baby slept peacefully under a mosquito net oblivious to hundreds of evacuated flood victims lined up for food at a monastery in Myanmar on Saturday, all waiting for water levels to recede before they can return home.

Floods and landslides caused by monsoon rain have killed five and forced around 48,000 people to flee their homes, the relief ministry said.

On Saturday in Bago city, northeast of Yangon, children floated on rubber tyres squealing with joy, while adults paddled wooden canoes with supplies through the murky brown and yellow water to evacuation shelters.

Hundreds of families sat fanning themselves in an open-air hall at a monastery as volunteers distributed meal packs of rice and egg curry.

Parents and children curled up on mats surrounded by bags of their meagre possessions - clothes strung up on makeshift washing lines above.

Residents displaced by flooding take shelter in a monastery compound following monsoon rains in Bago township on August 12, 2023.
Residents displaced by flooding take shelter in a monastery compound following monsoon rains in Bago township on August 12, 2023. Image Credit: AFP

Tin Win, 52, said although the conditions at the shelter were cramped and people were only receiving two meals a day, she was thankful to be safe and dry.

"The space is tiny and there is not much space to sleep. We have to lie down next to each other," she told AFP.

"If there is no more rain, we hope to go back home in three days."

Across the city, dogs scrambled onto Buddhist pagodas and steps to escape the flood water as rain pelted down.

The Myanmar weather bureau said the Bago River had risen a foot higher on Saturday but was expected to start going down over the coming days.

Myanmar experiences heavy monsoon rains every year, but scientists believe extreme weather events are being exacerbated by climate change.

Escape

Escaping the deluge was a struggle, said Ohm Kyi.

"We rented a boat to move some stuff from home, but the boat couldn't come very close. So, we had to walk in the water and carry everything we could," the 64-year-old told AFP.

"We only took some clothes, pots and plates."

Lay Shwe Zin Oo, director of Myanmar's social welfare, relief and resettlement ministry said that five people had died and as of Saturday 48,000 have been evacuated from Kachin, Karen, Chin, Rakhine, and Mon states and the Magway and Bago regions.

"We have provided necessary food including instant noodles and drinking water," she said.

"People are staying at monasteries, schools and other higher places."