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The Super Agency And The Little People Of Ayutthaya: Thai Talk


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THAI TALK

The super agency and the little people of Ayutthaya

Suthichai Yoon

The Nation

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BANGKOK: -- The Cabinet on Tuesday set up a "super body" to integrate the activities of all 16 government agencies related to water, flooding and drought under a single command. That's a big story.

But, to me, a bigger story was out there in the field. On the same day, local villagers in certain Ayutthaya districts went into renewed panic mode as a heavy downpour pushed the water level once again to 30-40 centimetres, raising the spectre of last year's disastrous inundation once again.

The immediate question is: How does a huge structure at the national level pacify hard-hit local people in all the central provinces? How can local people have confidence in the government preventing a recurrence of the 2011 flooding?

And will tomorrow's big party to "thank" those who helped the Flood Relief Operations Centre (Froc) fight the flood send the wrong message that the highly controversial and ineffective operation by the "central command" at the time should be commended - and repeated?

The gap between the national-level political super-structure and local communities' genuine concern remains a big issue that has yet to be resolved.

Cabinet's decision to form the new super agency is supposed to enhance efficiency and ensure that one single command will direct flood-fighting activities. The new body is called the National Water Resources and Flood Policy Committee (NWRFPC). It is headed by the prime minister herself.

The recently appointed Strategic Committee for Water Resources Management (SCWRM) headed by the premier (with Dr Sumet Tantivejjakul as chief adviser) will now become an advisory board.

I am not sure where the other much-heralded committee - the Strategic Committee for Reconstruction and Future Development (SCRF), headed by Dr Virabongsa Ramangkura - will be placed in the new structure. I couldn't find it listed anywhere in the new hierarchical chart.

Under that body is the Water Resources and Flood Management Committee (WRFMC). This will be headed by a deputy prime minister.

Then there is also the Office of the National Water Resources and Flood Policy Committee (ONWRFPC).

It has been explained to me that the new "super body" serves like a board of directors in a business corporation while the second-tier WRFMC will play the role of executive committee.

And the third-tier Secretariat Office of the NWRFPC is where all the 16 government agencies relevant to water in one way or another will actually gather. Obviously, they are supposed to follow instructions from the "executive committee", which will in turn formulate their action plans according to the policies laid down by the top super body.

Confused? My question from real life is: Once that new structure is in place, how does the situation in Ayutthaya reported last week get resolved?

District Officer Rewat Ampawanond of Amphur Sena, Ayutthaya province, told a local radio station: "Flood water was about 30-40 centimetres at Tambon Huawiang, Sena district yesterday, although the rainy season hasn't arrived. That's because of the unseasonable heavy downpour two days ago. It had nothing to do with water being released from the Bhumibol Dam and Chao Phraya Dam as had been speculated earlier."

He said Sena and Pakhai districts in this central province are located in low-lying areas. Local villagers had been adjusting their agricultural activities to the natural environment, and rice farming was done only once a year for a five-month period. For the remaining seven months of the year, they would turn the farmland into natural water-holding reservoirs.

In other words, despite lessons learned from last year's serious flooding, local people have yet to be assured that the national government is capable of understanding their basic concern - and that any overhaul of the organisational structure will be effective enough to instil confidence all the way down to the village level.

The flood victims, old and new, obviously couldn't care less about how the new and old committees will deal with the confusing chain of command. They want a simple answer to the Bt350 billion question: Can 2012 be flood-free for us?

The litmus test will come soon enough - perhaps in the next few weeks.

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-- The Nation 2012-02-09

Posted

Lets join together and pray to God... Let the heavens open and let the rain fall and fall...let it pour out and wash this dirty place clean... I have my Ark... so have Toyota..!

Posted

So they have stacked another layer of complacency atop an already thick layer of complacency.

Any ever tell them the more levels there are to hurdle through the longer it takes to get something done?

Posted (edited)

The reporting seems a tad over to top on this not to mention the picture used of a small child crying. To cut through the hype, an unseasonal heavy downpour has caused a bit of minimal flooding in some low lying, mainly agricultural land along the banks of a river which almost certainly floods every year in the rainy season.

The reports in the other paper are far more restrained and show a picture of some of the raised houses and raised walkways that they have in place to cope with the flooding they regularly get and also states that, according to the govenor of the province the flood amounts to 10 cms and reaches on 5-10m from the river bank.

Edited by Orac

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