Oct 20, 2011

Thailand - Impossible to protect all of Bangkok from flood: Thai PM


BANGKOK: Thailand's premier said Thursday that it was impossible to protect all of Bangkok from the country's worst floods in decades, describing the situation as a "national crisis".

"We cannot block the water forever," Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra told reporters, adding that the government would choose which areas of the city to allow the floods through to minimise the damage.

"We need areas that water can be drained through so water can flow out to the sea," she said.

The government has reinforced the city's floodwalls in an attempt to prevent the floods pouring into the densely populated city from the central plains, which are several metres under water in places.

Efforts to keep the country's economic and political heartland dry have been complication by a seasonal high tide and have also taken a heavy toll on areas outside of the capital.

"Flood waters are coming from every direction and we cannot control them because it's a huge amount of water. We will try to warn people," Yingluck said.

"This problem is very overwhelming. It's a national crisis so I hope to get cooperation from everybody."

Three months of heavy monsoon rains have killed 320 people, damaged the homes and livelihoods of millions of people, mostly in northern and central Thailand, and forced tens of thousands to seek refuge in shelters.

Currently, about one-third of Thailand's provinces are affected.

The opposition Democrats are calling on the government to declare a state of emergency to make it easier to control people and stop them damaging dykes to ease the flooding in their own areas.

Bangkok governor Sukhumbhand Paribatra warned on Wednesday that seven districts in northern and eastern Bangkok were at risk of inundation because of a broken dyke.

He advised residents in those areas to unplug electrical appliances, move belongings to higher ground and study the city's evacuation plan, saying they had 24 hours to prepare for possible flooding.

The authorities have failed to protect a number of major industrial parks from the gushing brown water, which has inundated hundreds of factories, disrupting production of cars, electronics and other goods.

The government says more than half a million people have been left without work.

Most of Thailand main tourist attractions - including the southern islands of Samui, Phuket and Phi Phi - have been unaffected. Bangkok's main airport is still operating as normal and its flood defences have been reinforced.

- AFP/fa



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