Jump to content

Capital Clean-Up In Full Swing


Lite Beer

Recommended Posts

Capital clean-up in full swing

THE NATION ON SUNDAY

30171212-01_big.jpg

Push to spruce up city for HM's birthday tomorrow; PM expects return to normalcy before New Year

As flood waters in Bangkok subsided further, cleanup operations were in full swing yesterday in hope the situation would return to normal in time for the celebrations of His Majesty the King's birthday tomorrow.

Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra yesterday expressed confidence that many areas in Bangkok and adjacent provinces could return to normal within this month.

Meanwhile, the Disaster Prevention and Mitigation Department reported the nationwide flood toll at 666 deaths and three missing persons (two in Mae Hong Son and one in Uttaradit), while floods remained in 16 provinces, including the southern provinces of Phatthalung, Nakhon Si Thammarat and Songkhla.

The Public Health Ministry reported that 2,020,000 people fell ill as a result of flooding and were treated by medical teams. It reported 7,431 flood victims as having severe stress, 9,548 as suffering from depression and 1,699 as being at risk of suicide.

Addressing the public on her weekly TV and radio programme, Yingluck said that, although some areas were still submerged, the Flood Relief Operations Centre (FROC) and other agencies were continuing to drain the water and that eastern Bangkok should be dry this month. As no more water was flowing into western Bangkok, commercial areas should return to normal within one or two weeks, although Phutthamonthon 4 and 5 roads and Om Noi will need two or three weeks to drain, Yingluck said. The Thonburi side of the city could be dry by the end of this month, she added.

With the water level in Khlong Rangsit Prayoonsak visibly lower, Yingluck said flood waters had receded in areas behind the "Big Bag" embankment. As a result, officials would continue to dismantle the barrier. Flooding in Nonthaburi and Pathum Thani could also subside before the New Year, she added.

Regarding the flooded industrial estates, Yingluck said Industry Minister Wannarat Charnnukul had told her that five estates were now dry, and that Saharat Nakhon and Nava Nakorn estates would be dry by December 10. Hi-Tech Industrial Estate and Factory Land have already resumed operations.

As for the flooding in the South, Yingluck said she had urged authorities to be on high alert, as more storms were expected in the region through tomorrow. She said the government was hosting a "Blue Flag" fair at Sanam Luang until Wednesday to sell low-priced goods to flood-affected people.

Bangkok Governor MR Sukhumbhand Paribatra yesterday ordered two sluice gates raised higher to drain water from Pathum Thani and Nonthaburi - while the Phrayasuren gate remained at 1.50m. Khlong Sam Wa district's Khlong Sam Wa sluice gate was raised to 1.40m from 90cm, and Min Buri district's Lam Beung Kwang gate to 1.40m from 1.30m.

A water-pushing device was placed in Khlong Thawee Wattana to lower the water level, making drainage from western Bangkok's Setthakit Ville easier, he said.

The Royal Irrigation Department yesterday opened four windows in the Chulalongkorn sluice gates, taking drainage capacity to 430,000 cubic metres per day, after the level of the Chao Phraya River (2.66m) fell below that of Khlong Rangsit Prayoonsak (2.72m) for the first time since the flooding began. This was expected to make drainage of water from eastern Bangkok faster as well.

Saying the city's main roads should be dry before year's end, Sukhumbhand said tens of thousands of tonnes of garbage remained in the capital and that he had ordered officials to collect as much of it as possible before tomorrowDecember 5. He invited members of the public to join the clean-up effort.

The governor also urged the city's health authorities to advise flood victims on how to protect themselves from germs. He said he had no plan for the New Year holidays because he wanted to help drain Bangkok, collect garbage and assist flood victims.

Sukhumbhand's deputy, Malinee Sukavejworakit, presided over the launch yesterday of a "Big Cleaning Day" campaign in Bang Khae district in front of The Mall Bang Khae and joined the garbage-collection effort along Phetchakasem Road.

Bangkok Deputy Governor Thaya Theepasuwan, presiding over Wat Don Muang School's cleaning project yesterday, distributed Chulalongkorn University's donation of 10,000 litres of anti-fungal chemicals to 436 flood-affected Bangkok schools to clean their buildings. While 345 schools are due to reopen on Tuesday, 91 more schools in 10 flooded districts will reopen on December 13.

FROC director Pracha Promnok said he had cancelled yesterday's meeting with the governors of seven flood-hit provinces to give them time to prepare information and check on flood-drainage problems before presenting and discussing their findings at a meeting on Tuesday or Wednesday. He said it was possible that FROC would dissolve or downsize after the flood situation returned to normal and that, after the meeting with the seven governors, he should have a better idea of the timetable.

The Royal Air Force base at Don Mueang Airport is dry and ready to re-open Tuesdayon December 6, and some 200 flooded cars there had been taken for repairs, he said.

Pathum Thani's Rangsit, Suchat and Pornpat markets and the Soi Sang Boon community started to be cleaned by residents yesterday, and should be fully clean in three days, while the 200-year anniversary Rattanakosin Housing Estate saw flood levels fall by 20cm. The worst-flooded spots there are now 70cm-deep and officials expect to have the estate dry by tomorrow.

nationlogo.jpg

-- The Nation 2011-12-04

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The Public Health Ministry reported that 2,020,000 people fell ill as a result of flooding and were treated by medical teams. It reported 7,431 flood victims as having severe stress, 9,548 as suffering from depression and 1,699 as being at risk of suicide.

Such precise numbers, and in such precise categories. It sounds as if there must be an army of well trained medics and psychiatrists knocking on every door and doing in depth interviews with every member of the household.

Truly unbelievable. Who makes this stuff up?

It sounds as if Thailand now belongs to some "far into the future super-state", where everyone enters their precise state of mind into their computer before going to bed each day.

Brave New World and 1984 rolled into one.

Definately not the Thailand I know and love.:jap:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The Public Health Ministry reported that 2,020,000 people fell ill as a result of flooding and were treated by medical teams. It reported 7,431 flood victims as having severe stress, 9,548 as suffering from depression and 1,699 as being at risk of suicide.

Such precise numbers, and in such precise categories. It sounds as if there must be an army of well trained medics and psychiatrists knocking on every door and doing in depth interviews with every member of the household.

Truly unbelievable. Who makes this stuff up?

It sounds as if Thailand now belongs to some "far into the future super-state", where everyone enters their precise state of mind into their computer before going to bed each day.

Brave New World and 1984 rolled into one.

Definately not the Thailand I know and love.:jap:

Someone in the ministry is just tossing a dice.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Clean-Up in ful swing? Is this not the nation? The garbage mountain near my house is doubling in size every day with no effort from the BMA to clean it, so much for their promise of cleaning up before the King's birthday.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Read the first two lines of the article. They ( No names mentioned ) hope to have Bangkok cleaned up for the Kings Birthday tomorrow !! However Ms Shinawatra said that the clean up will take all month. More BS from the goverment that never talks to each other.

Edited by Crossy
please use only the actual names of politicians and public figures
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think someone is living in the Cuckoo land! I am involved in some of the flood restoration/conservation of major companies and there is no way most of these factories will even start to produce to full capacity until the end of 2012, some we are even predicting end 2013. I don't think anyone in the government has a clue as to how they will dispose of thousands of Tonnes of contaminated hazardous chemicals and then where do you start to put the rest of the debris. This will go on for years to come. Wake up out there.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The Public Health Ministry reported that 2,020,000 people fell ill as a result of flooding and were treated by medical teams. It reported 7,431 flood victims as having severe stress, 9,548 as suffering from depression and 1,699 as being at risk of suicide.

Such precise numbers, and in such precise categories. It sounds as if there must be an army of well trained medics and psychiatrists knocking on every door and doing in depth interviews with every member of the household.

Truly unbelievable. Who makes this stuff up?

It sounds as if Thailand now belongs to some "far into the future super-state", where everyone enters their precise state of mind into their computer before going to bed each day.

Brave New World and 1984 rolled into one.

Definately not the Thailand I know and love.:jap:

Someone in the ministry is just tossing a dice.

I dont see why Grumpy Old Men are rejecting figures that could have been the result of hospital and clinic returns. After all the system collects data on every hotel guest so why not on everyone who who wants medical assistance.

If the gures are low the GOM deride them as a cover up and if they are high they are impossible. Having lived in a province under water for three months I am amazed that conditions have not beaten more people. The Thai resilience must come from years of oppression ( by the elements ,weather, central corruption etc).

I am sorry to see some people cannot put up with the horror of having deep dirty water carrying dead animals, sh1t, food waste etc through their personal belongings. We need to stop rejecting these figures and have some pity for the many people broken by this disaster.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Read the first two lines of the article. They ( No names mentioned ) hope to have Bangkok cleaned up for the Kings Birthday tomorrow !! However Ms Shinawatra said that the clean up will take all month. More BS from the goverment that never talks to each other.

and another part of the article says that in most areas the water should be receding by January. Yep, concentrate the media on the dry folks reporting that they are getting back to normal....

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Read the first two lines of the article. They ( No names mentioned ) hope to have Bangkok cleaned up for the Kings Birthday tomorrow !! However Ms Shinawatra said that the clean up will take all month. More BS from the goverment that never talks to each other.

PM Yingluck is the new "Evita" --- as the line goes, "One has to admire the stage management"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.










×
×
  • Create New...