Past Event RIMES Strengthening Lighting Early Warning and Public Awareness in Bangladesh
Date: June 28, 2026

RIMES Strengthening Lighting Early Warning and Public Awareness in Bangladesh

The Regional Integrated Multi-Hazard Early Warning System (RIMES) joined Bangladesh in commemorating International Lightning Safety Day 2026 on 28 June at the Krishibid Institution Bangladesh in Dhaka, marking the country’s inaugural national-level observance of the day. The event was held under the powerful Bangla slogan “เฆถเงเฆจเฆฒเง‡ เฆฌเฆœเงเฆฐเฆงเงเฆฌเฆจเฆฟ, เฆ˜เฆฐเง‡ เฆฏเฆพเฆ‡ เฆคเฆ–เฆจเฆ‡” (“When Thunder Roars, Get Indoors”).

In collaboration with the Bangladesh Meteorological Department (BMD), UNICEF, Save the Children, and BRAC, RIMES organized the event, bringing together representatives from government agencies, development and humanitarian organizations, technical institutions, the media, educational institutions, and lightning-affected communities.

The observance emphasized that accurate lightning forecasts must be complemented by timely communication, practical safety knowledge, and appropriate public action to reduce lightning-related deaths and losses. Discussions highlighted the importance of strengthening early warning dissemination, improving public awareness, and ensuring that vulnerable communities receive clear and actionable safety information.

Community participants from Sunamganj shared how lightning has directly affected their lives and livelihoods. They also reflected on how increased awareness and access to weather information are helping communities use forecasts to plan farming and fishing activities, keep students indoors during thunderstorms, and circulate BMD forecasts among community members. However, participants noted that livelihood pressures, limited access to warnings, and gaps in practical safety knowledge continue to expose vulnerable groups to lightning risks.

The workshop also highlighted BMDโ€™s experimental Lightning Alert System, developed with technical support from RIMES and operational from April 2025. The system provides location-specific lightning warnings and safety guidance one to six hours in advance through the BMD website, Facebook, WhatsApp, and other digital platforms.

A key part of the discussion focused on common misconceptions and practical safety measures. Mr. Rabbani emphasized that people should โ€œseek indoor shelter, avoid standing under trees, and disperse rather than gather in groups when caught in open fields.โ€ Participants also discussed the importance of avoiding plugged-in electrical equipment during thunderstorms and providing immediate CPR to a person struck by lightning.

The event reinforced the need to integrate the lightning alert system into regular institutional operations, strengthen last-mile dissemination, improve coordination among stakeholders, expand public awareness, and promote safe shelter during thunderstorms. It also reaffirmed the shared commitment of government agencies, technical organizations, development partners, and communities to ensure that timely and actionable lightning safety information reaches people at risk.

Md. Saidur Rahman Khan, Secretary of the Ministry of Disaster Management and Relief, expressed the Ministryโ€™s support for the initiative and stated that โ€œThe government understands the significance of this and The Ministry will work to make International Lightning Safety Day as a national day.โ€ 

His remarks underscored the importance of translating awareness into practical local action to reduce lightning-related deaths and build safer communities.

July 14, 2026