Heavy rains yesterday continued to batter Thailand’s flood-ravaged south, bringing the death toll up to 12 and leaving thousands of villages partially submerged, authorities said.
The flooding, which is roof-high in some areas, has affected more than 700,000 people since it started a week ago, the Thai Ministry of the Interior said in a statement.
At least 12 people have died, according to counts from the ministry and local officials, as waters turn roads into rivers and rip away stretches of rail track.
Photo: Reuters
The floods have also damaged more than 1,500 schools in the region, according to officials.
The downpour is expected to persist for at least two more days, according to the Thai Meteorological Department, which warned of flash floods in eight of the hardest-hit provinces.
“The situation is very bad today and tomorrow. It’s still raining heavily,”
Junjuda Pornsri, a metrological official, told reporters.
The capital of Nakhon Si Thammarat Province, which has shuttered its airport because of the weather, saw a record 162.1mm of rain on Friday night, she added.
Army bases across the south were mobilized yesterday to assist flood victims and deliver food to those trapped at home.
“There are two helicopters airlifting food and supplies to flood victims who cannot leave their houses,” Thai Colonel Chaisak Pornnipatkul from the Southern Army Headquarters told reporters.
The downpour is unusually heavy for this time of year in Thailand, which normally sees a three-month stretch of relatively dry and cool weather from November through to January.
It is high season for tourists who flock to the kingdom’s island resorts, powering a crucial sector of the economy.
However, the deluge has already disrupted beach holidays in several traveler hotspots, including the popular islands of Samui and Phangan.
Hundreds of tourists have had their flights delayed, while train and bus services on the mainland have also been suspended in flood-hit areas.
Yet some travelers are refusing to let the storm stop the fun, with photographs circulating on social media of tourists coasting through flooded streets on pool floats.
“Some tourists are enjoying the flooding, they’re taking pictures and going swimming,” said Nongyao Jirundorn, a tourism official on Samui island.
Neighbouring Malaysia was also hit by severe flooding earlier this week, with thousands stranded in relief centers in two northeastern states.
However, by yesterday, the number of evacuees in Kelantan and Terengganu had dropped to about 13,500, from about 23,000 on Wednesday, as weather conditions improved and authorities forecast less rainfall over the weekend.
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak visited Kelantan on Saturday and met with people seeking shelter at a relief center.
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