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Bangladesh Climate Change

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Women and children from the fishing village of South Tetulbarian in Barguna Sadar upazila in Bangladesh gather to console Moyna, who just lost her brother in a fishing accident because of violent weather, October 21, 2010 . She was screaming, "Where is my brother? oh brother, where are you?"Because of climate change, the seas are getting more violent, less predictable and boats are capsizing more frequently. Twenty percent of the women in this village are widows because so many have lost their husbands in the seas. Coastal and fishing populations are particularly vulnerable and Fishing communities in Bangladesh are subject not only to sea-level rise, but also flooding and increased typhoons. Erosion as a result of stronger and higher tides, cyclones and storm surges is eating away Bangladesh's southern coast. Yet the largely fishing community cannot live without the sea. "We only know how to catch fish," say the fishermen. ( Ami Vitale)

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Women and children from the fishing village of South Tetulbarian in Barguna Sadar upazila  in Bangladesh gather to console Moyna, who just lost her brother in a fishing accident because of violent weather, October 21, 2010 . She was screaming, "Where is my brother? oh brother, where are you?"Because of climate change, the seas are getting more violent, less predictable and boats are capsizing more frequently. Twenty percent of the women in this village are widows because so many have lost their husbands in the seas. Coastal and fishing populations are particularly vulnerable and Fishing communities in Bangladesh are subject not only to sea-level rise, but also flooding and increased typhoons. Erosion as a result of stronger and higher tides, cyclones and storm surges is eating away Bangladesh's southern coast.  Yet the largely fishing community cannot live without the sea. "We only know how to catch fish," say the fishermen. ( Ami Vitale)