BANGKOK
(Reuters) - Floods in Thailand engulfed another industrial estate on Sunday but
the capital, Bangkok, appears for now to have escaped the devastation seen
elsewhere in the country despite heavy monsoon rain and water streaming towards
it from the north.
Flooding has killed 297 people since late July
and caused $3 billion in damage. A third of the country is under water but
officials are confident low-lying Bangkok will be spared after the
strengthening of its system of defensive dikes and canals.
"We're dredging canals in both western
and eastern zones, which should be completed in no more than a week. The
irrigation department has provided an update on the water situation, which has
reassured us," Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra told reporters.
Ayutthaya, Pathum Thani and Nakhon Sawan
provinces north of Bangkok have been devastated. Floods have swallowed up homes
and forced a series of huge industrial parks to close, including the Bang Pa-In
estate in Ayutthaya on Saturday.
Another estate, Factory Land in Ayutthaya,
which has 93 factories employing 8,500 employees, flooded in the early hours of
Sunday.
Most of the factories make electronic
components and car parts, so this will add to the problems of the international
firms that use Thailand as a regional production hub.
"The water broke in at around midnight.
Operators there were aware of it and evacuated people from the estate ... Up to
now, five industrial estates have been flooded," said Prayoon Tingthong,
in charge of industrial affairs for the province.
Japanese car maker Honda Motor Co Ltd has shut
its Ayutthaya plant, which accounts for 4.7 percent of its global output, and
said on Friday it would stay closed until Oct. 21.
The authorities are worried about another
industrial park, Nava Nakorn in Pathum Thani province north of Bangkok, which
is standing in the way of the flow of water towards the capital.
Thai media said soldiers and workers from the
estate, Thailand's oldest with more than 200 factories, were working around the
clock to strengthen its walls and divert water.
However, on Sunday the Bangkok Post website
quoted an irrigation official as saying a crucial sluice-gate had been repaired
so the estate was now safe.
HIGH
RIVER LEVEL
The north, northeast and centre of Thailand
have been worst hit by the flooding and Bangkok -- much of it only two metres
(6.5 ft) above sea level -- is at risk as water overflows from reservoirs in
the north, swelling the Chao Phraya river that winds through the densely
populated city.
That danger was compounded at the weekend by
high estuary tides that hamper the flow of water into the sea.
The river was reported to be at a record high
level of 2.15 metres (seven feet) at one point on Saturday but the embankment
wall running along it in inner Bangkok is at least 2.5 metres high and has been
raised along vulnerable stretches.
"The government's operations are
proceeding well ... As for the current water level, it is satisfactory and it's
quite certain that water will not flood Bangkok," said Police General Pongsapat
Pongcharoen, a spokesman at a government crisis centre set up at the city's old
Don Muang airport.
Even so, Bangkokians have stocked up on
bottled water, instant noodles, rice and canned goods. Many have parked their
cars in elevated garages and piled sandbags in front of shop-houses and homes.
The
economy is bound to suffer from the flooding.
Both the central bank and government have put
the cost at about 100 billion baht ($3.2 billion) already, more than 1 percent
of gross domestic product (GDP).
The Finance Ministry has cut its GDP growth
forecast for this year to 3.7 percent from 4.0 percent.
The central bank said on Friday that 104 bank
branches had closed because of flooding, mainly in the central region. Deputy
Prime Minister Kittirat Na Ranong has called bankers to a meeting at the Don
Muang crisis centre on Monday.
A committee of government, union and employer
representatives is due to decide on Monday on a government plan for a big
increase in the minimum wage but Thai media said employers appealed on Sunday
for the decision to be put off for six months because of the damage caused by
the floods.
Viparat Jantraprap and Kochakorn Boonlai |
Reuters
(Additional reporting by Jutarat Skulpichetrat
and Pracha Hariraksapitak; Writing by Alan Raybould; Editing by Sanjeev
Miglani)
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