On
one side of Bangkok, you'll find the victims of Thailand's worst flooding in
half a century. They float down trash-strewn waterways, paddling washtubs with
wicker brooms over submerged neighborhoods.
Just a few miles (kilometers) away, you'll
find something else entirely: well-heeled shoppers perusing bustling malls
decorated with newly hung Halloween decorations, couples sipping espresso in
the air-conditioned comfort of ultrachic cafes.
Although catastrophic flooding has devastated
a third of this Southeast Asian nation and submerged some of the capital's
northernmost districts, the reality for the majority of this sprawling
metropolis of 9 million people is that life goes on.
The desperate images of disaster contrast
sharply with scenes of total normality — from night-owls drinking cocktails in
red light districts to tourists enjoying relaxing foot massages in faux-leather
chairs downtown.
An exodus of thousands of Bangkok residents to
nearby resorts and a government-ordered five-day holiday have left the
notoriously congested city unusually easy to maneuver by taxi and three-wheeled
tuk-tuk.
"It's better, in a way," Nicole
Attwater of Sydney said Sunday, adding that she was happy to brave some
flooding to see the Grand Palace, the gold-studded former seat of the Thai
monarchy, with far lighter crowds than normal on a sunny morning.
"It's a good time to come, because it's
quiet," she said.
Most of Bangkok is dry, with little to
indicate that anything is wrong — except for the ominous walls of sandbags
stacked around hotels and homes, and the apocalyptic predictions of everyone
from expatriate bloggers to some members of the Thai government.
Yet, the threat of floodwaters sweeping
through the city is still very real. Nationwide, 381 people have died over the
last three months, and 110,000 more have been displaced — 10,000 of them in
Bangkok, according to government figures. The catastrophe has put hundreds of
thousands of people out of work and cost billions of dollars in damage — a bill
that grows larger by the day.
Among items struck from tourists' agendas:
shopping for crafts at the popular Chatuchak weekend market and dinner cruises
down the city's Chao Phraya river — all canceled due to the high waters. The
river swelled to a record high level early Sunday, spilling into some
neighborhoods and sparking fears it would flood the inner city.
Fears over worse-case scenarios and travel
warnings issued by foreign governments have slashed visitors by half at sites
like the Grand Palace and the giant gold-plated Reclining Buddha inside
Bangkok's Wat Pho temple complex.
But the biggest problem by far, said tour
guide Keerati Atui, is the media, which he said has given the impression that
most of Bangkok is under water.
"Look around," he said, gesturing to
lines of tourists streaming into the white-walled palace. "It's dry.
Everything here is normal."
River water has lapped at the palace gates and
even crept inside, but much of it has welled up through drains in the riverside
neighborhood. One picture posted this week on Twitter showed a cameraman
filming a television news anchor on a street beside the palace in ankle-high
water. On both sides of the pair, the street was bone dry.
Heavy monsoon rains have pummeled a large
swath of Asia since July. As floodwaters crept across Thailand, they first
drowned neighboring provinces, then districts on the northern outskirts of
Bangkok.
Last week, advancing water forced the city's
Don Muang airport, which is used mainly for domestic flights, to shut down.
However, the international Suwarnabhumi airport remains open, and the city's
skytrain and subway lines were functioning normally.
Nobody knows how far the water will go, but so
far Bangkok's defenses have mostly held.
Statements from government leaders have
alternated from assurances the capital would be spared to dire warnings that
nowhere is safe.
Panicked Bangkokians have stripped
supermarkets and convenience stores of bottled water and dried noodle supplies
in recent weeks as a result, but there is still plenty to drink. Both those
items can be still found in street-side shops along the city's temple-dotted
riverside, where the mineral water is ice cold and the noodle soup is spicy and
sprinkled with fish balls.
"A lot of people are overreacting,
they've been hoarding too much stuff," said Kwanpimol Pleegluay, a
48-year-old housewife. "They watch the news and see people in other
flooded provinces and think that's going to happen to them here."
Kwanpimol was taking a casual stroll along the
Chao Phraya with her husband over the weekend — to see how high the river
swelled. After peering into the water, she took his photo and chose one word to
describe the scene: "Beautiful," she said.
On the other side of the Chao Phraya, where
the 200-year-old pagoda of the city's famed Temple of the Dawn rises from the
banks, 42-year-old monk Phramaha Abhin said he was not worried.
"The Lord Buddha taught us not to be
negligent, we must always prepare," said Phramaha, referring to newly laid
protective layer of sandbags outside the temple, where he lives. "But he
also taught us not to foolishly fear that which hasn't happened yet."
Many people in Bangkok and neighboring
provinces see the flooding as something that should be accepted, not something
to be angry about.
In Bangkok's heavily flooded Thonburi
district, a navy team evacuated a stranded pregnant woman whose water broke
Sunday. Aorasa Wisetkoop looked anxious, but remained calm and held tightly
onto her belly, while a rescue team lifted her into a boat.
"We had to get her to hospital,"
rescuer Nitipat Mongolpradit said.
But along with every tragic and urgent
incident in the inundation, there were images of Thais splashing in the
floodwaters for fun.
When the river began flowing like a waterfall
over a wall into Chantana Srisuwan's wooden-shack kitchen, the 58-year-old
pulled out a stack of aluminum pans, soaped them up and began washing them.
"Why bother being troubled?" she asked.
"If we think we shouldn't get wet, we'll
never have peace of mind," she said, as a neighbor complained he could not
sleep because his bed was submerged beneath encroaching waves. "If there's
no water, great.
But if there is, we have to learn to live with
it."
TODD PITMAN, Associated Press
Associated Press writers Vee Intarakratug,
Margie Mason and Ian Mader in Bangkok contributed to this report.
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