150 000 people affected
Aid workers said the rat invasion had affected about 150 000 people.Bangladesh's army, local officials and the UN Development Programmes were also handing out aid in affected areas.
"Rat flood"
The flowering of bamboo forests for the first time in 50 years in the affected areas, located along a 300-kilometre border stretch with India, led to the so-called "rat-flood".The rodents multiplied by feeding on bamboo blossoms, rice stalks and vegetables. Villagers said that whatever they tried to grow was devoured within hours.
Plague every 50 to 60 years
The bamboo forests first began blossoming last year in the Lusai Hills in the neighbouring Indian state of Mizoram. Authorities declared it a disaster zone after rats went on to eat food stocks.
Locals said the plague happened once every 50 to 60 years, with the last such disaster in 1958.It was feared the rats would infest the region for at least three more years, as they did in the late 1950s.
http://www.news24.com/News24/World/News/0,,2-10-1462_2324544,00.html
As in the days of Noah....