DHAKA: In a baking hot courtyard with more than 100 other village women, Helena Chaudhury waits to collect the roughly wrapped bundle which will help protect her family
after some of the worst floods in Bangladesh's history washed away their possessions and most of their fragile home.
For now, the "hygiene kit" - soap, candles, matches, two mosquito nets and basic clothing - is all that stands between the family of six and disease as this summer's catastrophic monsoon floodwaters finally recede.
"We tried to stay in our home, but it was too dangerous and we had to go to the relief shelter (in a neighbouring school)," Helena, 27, says. "People helped each other with food but our house was destroyed, apart from the roof and one wall. We have moved back and patched up the walls with paper."
The Chaudhurys' village, Velanagar in Narshindi, three hours' drive along rain-damaged roads north-east of the capital, is typical of thousands of settlements battered this year by a double wave of fatal flooding.
In July and August, half of Bangladesh was inundated by rains and river flooding that killed more than 760 people, affected more than 30 million, and washed away untold numbers of homes, roads and vital subsistence crops.
Then earlier this month, as global attention turned to the hurricanes lashing the Caribbean and Florida, and then to lethal flooding in Haiti, Bangladesh endured its heaviest rain in 50 years, inundating the already saturated land and devastating recovery efforts.
While children caught fish in the contaminated metre-deep floodwaters of Dhaka's streets, hectares of aman rice seedlings and other crops planted after the August rains were washed away and hundreds more villages, particularly in the south-west which had escaped the worst of the earlier floods, were inundated.
Aid agencies warn that the consequences of this little acknowledged double tragedy is a disaster on a far larger scale than first recognised in a low-lying country wearily familiar with annual flooding.
Unicef and the world food programme warn that within six weeks, without rapid medical and food aid, more than a million Bangladeshi children risk acute illness or death through malnutrition. More than 500,000 pregnant and breast feeding mothers are also seen by aid experts as acutely vulnerable.
The latest UN assessment warns that most areas will need food at least until the aman rice harvest in December, with some requiring much longer support if that crop fails.
In Velanagar, where surrounding fields still lie under sheets of floodwater, hygiene kits funded by the British government and distributed by Islamic Relief will be followed by a fresh round of food rations containing rice, dahl, oil and salt.
FAMINE: "We are expecting a potential famine-like situation in December," said Ahmed Nasr of Islamic Relief. "It could be compounded by the cold when the temperature drops to around 7C during the winter. The children do not have the clothes to protect them and at least 6,000 families in this area have to rebuild their homes."
Further north-east, at the village of Dakshin Bejora in Thana Madhabpur region, children with bright orange-and-yellow hair ribbons dance in a primary school rebuilt out of corrugated iron after waist-high floodwaters swept away its woven jute walls.
After abandoning their homes for the worst flooding, the 1,500 villagers have returned to try to nurture their waterlogged crops of rice and jute. Sitting in a one-room hut, Shirina Akhtar, 25, points to her family's single platform bed propped up on four bricks in a vain effort to elevate it above the first floods.
"At first we hoped to stay here, but we have two small daughters and it was not safe when the waters came so high," she says. Shirina has taken out a 1,000 taka (Pounds Sterling 10) loan from the charity Brac to repair her home with corrugated iron, but must pay the money back from her husband's meagre seasonal income as a farm labourer.
The central government, which drew back from early appeals for international aid so as to demonstrate that the impoverished country can cope with floods, is now seeking help to repair some of the Pounds Sterling 4bn in damage to agriculture, industry and infrastructure which will take years to complete.
International donors and governments including the UK, which has given Pounds Sterling 25m in aid on top of its Pounds Sterling 100m annual development funding, want Bangladesh's BNP-led coalition to place more focus on flood prevention. -Dawn/The Guardian News Service.