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Thailand Floods 2011: Water May Stay For Six More Weeks, PM Says (PHOTOS)

TODD PITMAN and VEE INTARAKRATUG   10/22/11 02:18 PM ET   AP

BANGKOK — Thailand's catastrophic floods may take up to six weeks to recede, the prime minister said Saturday, as residents living in Bangkok's outskirts sloshed through waist-high waters in some areas and the human toll from the crisis nationwide rose to 356 dead and more than 110,000 displaced.

Water bearing down on the capital from the north began spilling through Bangkok's outer districts on Friday and continued creeping in on Saturday. So far, however, most of the metropolis of 9 million people has escaped unharmed, and its two airports are operating normally.

Bangkokians are girding for the worst, though, after Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra this week urged all residents to move valuables to higher ground.

A mild panic prompted a run on grocery stores, with many running out of bottled water. A Thai company that distributes drinking water across the city sent out an SMS to customers announcing deliveries had been halted because of the crisis.

The government's emergency relief center said flooding in the city was occuring at "concentrated points." One of them, the northern district of Don Muang, was partially inundated after floodwaters burst through a canal barrier wall that workers were scrambling to repair overnight.

Don Muang is home to the capital's second airport, as well as the government flood relief center. But some residents in swamped areas there said they were running short on food. Volunteers who had been preparing to send emergency supplies to Ayutthaya, a city north of Bangkok which has been submerged for more than two weeks, were forced to consume them instead.

"Now we've become flood victims" ourselves, said 53-year-old Pimnipha Na Bangchang. "We're distributing this food aid to our community because we haven't received any help."

Also Saturday, Bangkok's governor advised several thousand people living along the city's main Chao Phraya river to move as high tides expected Sunday could cause the river to overflow its banks in some areas.

Excessive monsoon rains have drowned a third of the Southeast Asian nation since late July, causing billions of dollars in damage and putting nearly 700,000 people temporarily out of work.

Some flooding on Bangkok's outskirts was expected after Yingluck ordered floodgates opened Thursday in a risky move to drain the dangerous runoff through urban canals and into the sea. Nobody knows with any certainty to what extent the city will flood.

In a weekly radio address Saturday, Yingluck said that "during the next four to six weeks, the water will recede."

In the meantime, the government will step up aid to those whose lives have been disrupted, including 113,000 people living in temporary shelters after being forced to abandon submerged homes, she said.

The government said at least 356 people have died in the floods since July.

The flooding is the worst to hit the country since 1942, and the crisis is proving a major test for Yingluck's nascent government, which took power in July after heated elections and has come under fire for not acting quickly or decisively enough to prevent major towns north of the capital from being ravaged by floodwaters.

The Labor Ministry says many of the nearly 700,000 people put temporarily out of work are from five major industrial estates north of Bangkok that were forced to suspend operations. Among those affected are Japanese carmakers Toyota and Honda, which have halted major assembly operations. The electronics industry has also suffered, including computer hard drive maker Western Digital, which has two major production facilities in the flooded zone.

In an interview published in the Bangkok Post, Science and Technology Minister Plodprasop Suraswadi said natural and manmade factors combined to create the crisis.

Seasonal monsoons came six weeks early and have lasted longer than usual, filling reservoirs, dams and fields with 30 percent more rainfall than average. At the same time, the government kept too much water in dams over the summer in a bid to save water for rice cultivation, Plodprasop said.

Overall, about 700 billion cubic feet (20 billion cubic meters) of rainfall has drenched Thailand over the last several months, Plodprasop said.

About half of that has already drained into the sea, leaving about 350 billion cubic feet (10 billion cubic meters) of water threatening Bangkok, much of it spread across rice fields in Thailand's central plains.

Plodprasop said it will take about 20 more days to drain those floodwaters into the Gulf of Thailand, a task he said was complicated by the fact that the nation's irrigation system was designed to control water flows for farming and consumption – not to prevent floods.

"We have never faced such a huge mass of floodwater in the fields," Plodprasop said.

He said he believed inner Bangkok "should be safe, as we have an extensive drainage system with water pumps to drain excess water out quickly." But some of the city's outskirts could flood up to 6 feet (2 meters) deep, he said.

___

Associated Press writer Thanyarat Doksone contributed to this report.

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Thai residents make their way through flooded streets on October 22, 2011 in Pathum Thani on the outskirts of Bangkok, Thailand. Hundreds of factories closed in the central Thai province of Ayutthaya and Nonthaburi as the waters come closer to threaten Bangkok as well. Around 320 people have died in flood-related incidents since late July according to the Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation. Thailand is experiencing the worst flooding in 50 years with damages running as high as $6 billion which could increase of the floods swamp Bangkok. (Getty)
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BANGKOK — Thailand's catastrophic floods may take up to six weeks to recede, the prime minister said Saturday, as residents living in Bangkok's outskirts sloshed through waist-high waters in som...
BANGKOK — Thailand's catastrophic floods may take up to six weeks to recede, the prime minister said Saturday, as residents living in Bangkok's outskirts sloshed through waist-high waters in som...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheFlowerChild
07:52 PM on 10/23/2011
Hmm. Well theories about the future are almost completely plausible when you look at what's happening to the environments all around the world. Floods, Tsunamis, Earthquakes, Tornadoes. The melting of the Artic would presumably say we have rising sea levels and the droughts say Earth won't have enough clean water. I think it's easy for someone to say, "Wish them good luck", when what "we" should be doing is more than that. The global warming crisis is going to effect us all; it's either all of us help each other all around the world or we will all perish. Do you think that your "money" will matter?
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05:10 PM on 10/23/2011
Wish them good luck and a speedy recovery from the disaster. Here's hoping more money is spent protecting citizens from disasters and alleviating poverty in the future rather than just toys.
04:05 PM on 10/23/2011
$33 for a dang Crocodile! I'd be pissed!
03:37 PM on 10/23/2011
Wasn't Thailand hit by a Tsunami about 6 years ago? I'd say they need to A:Move B:start building their shelter so that they can survive every disaster. or C: Just forget about it and put the paper houses back up again. Unfortunately it will probably end up being C:
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Captai
Get out while you still can!!
03:46 PM on 10/23/2011
Paper houses? Are you daft? Had you been to Thailand you'd know that most construction is concrete. Jebus. Go away.
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FoxIslander
Fox Island...no relation to Fox News
01:47 PM on 10/24/2011
...do you apply the same theory to the gulf coast?
02:42 PM on 10/23/2011
Six more weeks of misery? Sounds pretty good compared to our situation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
catboycolo
I'll have the coffee, not the KoolAid
10:18 AM on 10/23/2011
what dry isn't. Best of luck to all those affected!
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
Mochilero
Have backpack, will travel
07:58 PM on 10/22/2011
This is the new normal. When I was there in January, I heard that the Thai government is making contingency plans to move several million people to the northern highlands within ten years, as their is a good chance that a significant portion of the country will be underwater by then. The same goes for Cambodia, except they have little functioning government, and nowhere to go. For a futuristic take on all this read The Wind-Up Girl, set in Bangkok fifty years from now.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
06:04 PM on 10/22/2011
I just love these reports on natural disasters that say: the government is powerless to stop it: DUH, it is a natural disaster man cannot stop it. You can put up all the sandbags you want, but the sheer volume may breach them. It is nobody's fault. Unless you can blame Mother Nature.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Galong
Sacrifice, the future has its price.
12:37 AM on 10/23/2011
Actually, there are ways to combat Mother Nature's actions. It simply takes planning. Amsterdam and other low-lying cities have dealt with their threats by actually acting on the matter instead of talking and blaming everyone else, which is what they're doing here. I've lived in Thailand for the past twenty years and I know how little they accept blame and how things like this turn really political really fast. Check out the predictions from past floods at http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/investigation/262735/1983-1995-and-2011-the-more-it-rains
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mainemomma
I don't want a micro bio
07:55 AM on 10/23/2011
Thank you for sharing the link. It's amazing. I work in the electronics industry and service turnkey manfuacturing in Thailand. Millions of dollars in component inventory is at risk, we can't get in to see for ourselves - and the locals swear the parts are 'fine'. Somehow I don't think so. Also, the hard disk drive industry is mostly based there, and this flood has affected the global supply of these drives.

Maybe the officials will decide to have better plans, after the manufacturing pulls out of the country. After the losses are calculated, I don't see how these companies will come back.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Benmyoho
Dreaming of the Annunaki
05:03 PM on 10/22/2011
If Thailand has sunk, the way Indonesia did, there's no way for flood waters to recede. I hope Huffington Post also features the Indonesia deluge. Say what you will, but a rogue planet now in our solar system is causing all this havoc.
04:32 PM on 10/22/2011
Hope the flooding disappears and everyone turns up alright. My heart and prayers go out to you!
03:31 PM on 10/22/2011
Bangkok is my dream retirement city it a few years, keep it dry.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Captai
Get out while you still can!!
04:55 PM on 10/22/2011
Why is it your dream?
10:23 PM on 10/22/2011
I have to assume you have never been here. For starters, your chance of being mugged or assaulted on the streets in Bangkok are far lower than any US city, despite the impression you might get from Hangover II. The people are pleasant and dress nicely, the food (any cuisine) is wonderful, weather ain't bad outside of some water from time to time. Medical care is good and readily available, and the public transport system means you do not need a car to go anywhere. Much more, but why don't you visit and see for yourself?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
catboycolo
I'll have the coffee, not the KoolAid
10:25 AM on 10/23/2011
Is it just americans you hate? Or is it really yourself?
02:26 PM on 10/22/2011
In a weekly radio address Saturday, Yingluck said that "during the next four to six weeks, the water will recede."

Interesting how HAARP proceeds with a time line.
OverseasVet
Stationed not deployed
01:40 PM on 10/22/2011
Video blocked. This video on flooding in Thailand cannot be viewed in Thailand.
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abbienormal
What hump?
03:30 PM on 10/22/2011
Interesting. I was just going to forward this to my son in Chaing Mai. I guess I won't.
05:07 PM on 10/22/2011
Give it a try anyway....
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