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Bangkok Escapes Wrath Of Floods


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Posted

NATURAL DISASTER

Bangkok escapes wrath of floods

By THE NATION

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Pathum Thani farmers beg BMA to open watergate to ease their suffering.

Bangkok yesterday managed to escape being submerged in floods that have been sweeping through 24 provinces.

Farmers in the neighbouring province of Pathum Thani are calling on authorities to open at least one watergate in the capital so water levels in an overflowing canal can be eased.

"The Hok Wa canal has risen one metre above its banks," Suchat Janchang complained yesterday.

Suchat, who is a farmer in Pathum Thani's Lam Luk Ka district, said more than 1,000 rai of his paddy fields would be in jeopardy if a watergate was not opened soon to let out some of the water. "Have some sympathy for us. We are going to incur huge losses," the 46-year-old said.

Lam Luk Ka district chief Panuwat Jenprasert said if Bangkok authorities continued blocking flood waters, then more than 18,000 rai of the local farmland would be submerged sustaining huge damages.

"Some of them have been flooded for nearly a month now," he said.

After a meeting with relevant authorities on preventing floods in Bangkok and adjacent provinces, Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra said the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA) had been well prepared to deal with the situation.

Also present at the meeting were Bangkok Governor MR Sukhumbhand Paribatra and the provincial governors of Pathum Thani, Nakhon Pathom, Samut Prakan, Samut Sakhon and Chachoengsao.

According to Yingluck, authorities are proceeding in line with His Majesty's advice on water management as they tackle the ongoing flood problems. "We will be pushing the water out of the capital via Lat Pho Canal. It's faster," she said.

With run-offs from the North, the Chao Phraya River has already overflowed in several provinces in the Central region.

In Chai Nat province, raging torrents in the Chao Phraya River knocked down a portion of an embankment and submerged Phaholyothin Road between the 290 and 293 kilometre markers, making that portion of the road impassable to traffic.

According to BMA Drainage and Sewerage Department chief Sanya Sheenimit, up to 3,800 cubic metres of water travelled down Chao Phraya River in Ayutthaya's Bang Sai district yesterday. Ayutthaya is just an hour's drive from Bangkok.

The embankment along the Chao Phraya River in the capital can just about accommodate 3,500 cubic metres of water per second.

The Meteorological Department yesterday forecast heavy downpours until tomorrow in several provinces including Phetchabun, Lop Buri, Saraburi, Surin, Nakhon Nayok and Nakhon Ratchasima.

According to the Emergency Operation Centre for Flooding, Storm and Landslide, floods have already disrupted the lives of more than 1.9 million people.

In Phitsanulok, the mobile medical teams found that 119 residents in the few areas they could access had suicidal tendencies. Relevant officials |are now rushing to provide help.

Meanwhile, Labour Ministry permanent secretary Dr Somkiat Chayasriwong said employees and employers under the social security system would be able to seek soft loans till April 30 if they had been affected by flooding.

Employees can each seek a loan of no more than Bt50,000 at a fixed interest rate of 2.5 per cent for two years. Employers can seek a loan of no more than Bt1 million, at a fixed interest rate of 3 per cent for three years.

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-- The Nation 2011-09-22

Posted

I live in Bangkok so I'm happy to hear it won't flood, but I have enormous sympathy for people affected and have given what I can to charity boxes in my local mall to help them. A few years ago, my home had minor flooding and it was disgusting; the smell lingered for months, so when I see pictures of waist-deep water, my heart really goes out.

I saw a website about a British company who designed special homes which could float in a flood - no idea about the price but the government budgets for tablet computers and car tax cuts would certainly make a dent in the cost.

This situation of saving Bangkok has been going on for a long time, does anyone know whether the dams being built in Lao will reduce annual flooding in Thailand?

Posted

I live in Bangkok so I'm happy to hear it won't flood, but I have enormous sympathy for people affected and have given what I can to charity boxes in my local mall to help them. A few years ago, my home had minor flooding and it was disgusting; the smell lingered for months, so when I see pictures of waist-deep water, my heart really goes out.

I saw a website about a British company who designed special homes which could float in a flood - no idea about the price but the government budgets for tablet computers and car tax cuts would certainly make a dent in the cost.

This situation of saving Bangkok has been going on for a long time, does anyone know whether the dams being built in Lao will reduce annual flooding in Thailand?

The dams in Lao will affect the Mekong.

Posted

the rainy season is not over yet, anything might be happening within a month or even 2 months. Rains eased off, but the canals and chao phraya are full to the brim

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