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Thailand Floods Death Toll: Over 500 Dead

Thailand Floods

TODD PITMAN   11/ 6/11 10:11 PM ET   AP

BANGKOK — Advancing pools of filthy water threatened the Thai capital's subway system Monday and surrounded the emergency headquarters set up to deal with flooding that has claimed more than 500 lives nationwide.

Bangkok Gov. Sukhumbhand Paribatra has ordered evacuations in 11 of Bangkok's 50 districts, and partial evacuations apply in seven more, as the huge runoff from monsoon-buffeted central Thailand seeps south through the metropolitan area to the sea.

The evacuations are not mandatory, and most people are staying to protect homes and businesses. But the orders illustrate how far flooding has progressed into the city and how powerless the government has been to stop it.

The latest district added to list Sunday was Chatuchak, home to a large public park and an outdoor shopping zone that is a major tourist attraction. The Chatuchak Weekend Market was open over the weekend but had fewer-than-normal vendors and customers, as floodwaters poured past the market's eastern edge.

Chatuchak, just a few miles (kilometers) north of Bangkok's still-unaffected central business zone, also is home to the government's national emergency flood relief headquarters. It is housed in the Energy Ministry – a building now surrounded by water.

The relief headquarters moved several days ago out of Bangkok's Don Muang airport after it, too, was flooded.

Relentless rainfall has pummeled vast swaths of Thailand since late July, swamping the country and killing 506 people, according to the latest government statistics. Most victims have drowned, while a handful died from flood-related electrocutions.

No deaths have been reported in Bangkok. The nearby province of Ayutthaya, which has been submerged for more than one month, has the highest toll with 90 reported dead.

Floodwaters have begun receding in some provinces north of the capital, and a major cleanup is planned in Ayutthaya this week. But the runoff has massed around Bangkok and completely submerged some of the city's outer neighborhoods.

On Sunday, cars sloshed through a flooded road underneath Chatuchak's Mo Chit Skytrain station, the northernmost stop on the capital's elevated train system.

Floodwaters also reached roads at three subway stops in northern Bangkok. Both mass transit networks are functioning normally, though some exits have been barricaded and closed.

Also in Chatuchak, water has begun approaching a main road near the Mo Chit bus terminal, a major gateway to northern Thailand. The bus station and roads in the area remained open, traffic police chief Uthaiwan Kaewsa-ard said.

On Friday, workers completed a 3.7-mile (6-kilometer) flood wall made from massive, hastily assembled sandbags to divert some of the water flowing toward central Bangkok. But large amounts of water are already beyond that wall, and officials say that besides a network of canals and underground drainage tunnels, there are no more barriers preventing water from pushing south into the heart of the city.

Over the past two decades, Bangkok's much enlarged and improved drainage system has increasingly been able to siphon off water during monsoon seasons with average rainfall. But amid Thailand's worst flooding since World War II, that system is facing its greatest test yet.

Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra says a plan to be put before the Cabinet on Tuesday would allocate 100 billion baht ($3.3 billion) for post-flood reconstruction.

Yingluck's government has come under fire for failing to predict the threat to the capital. Residents also have been frustrated by widely different assessments of the flooding situation from the prime minister, Bangkok's governor and the country's top water experts and officials.

___

Associated Press writer Vee Intarakratug contributed to this report.

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BANGKOK — Advancing pools of filthy water threatened the Thai capital's subway system Monday and surrounded the emergency headquarters set up to deal with flooding that has claimed more than 500...
BANGKOK — Advancing pools of filthy water threatened the Thai capital's subway system Monday and surrounded the emergency headquarters set up to deal with flooding that has claimed more than 500...
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11:12 PM on 11/09/2011
There's so much that needs to be done to save suffering humanity, and the Republicans want to manufacture more predator drones and nuclear power plants.
02:24 PM on 11/09/2011
it's so terribly
12:10 PM on 11/07/2011
I admire the Thai people. From the photographs and videos that I've seen, it's amazing on the whole how they seem to be carrying on almost as normal. I can't see that happening in very many other places if similar flooding occurred. I know that I'd be curled up in a fetal position (on an air mattress) weeping and wailing.
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rjsparling
Disciple of Odin, because he's the MAN!
06:36 AM on 11/07/2011
It's Obama's fault. I'll bet you liberal global warming people are happy now!
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Bill Hummel
01:41 AM on 11/07/2011
All I see is your comment is being approved.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tony Blass
said it wasn't a tax but it was
01:40 AM on 11/07/2011
our thoughts are with our friends in Thailand. this is very sad.
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Bill Hummel
01:27 AM on 11/07/2011
Wait till India has a flood.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bill Hummel
01:27 AM on 11/07/2011
Wait mtill India has it.
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b525
10:28 PM on 11/06/2011
I recently read in the New York Times that much of the recent flooding in Thailand has been intensified by multiple new dams and river engineering schemes there, which have completely disrupted the ability of rain/flood waters to drain quickly back out to the sea during the monsoon season. The dams cause the floodwater to back up for many miles BEHIND the dams, flooding towns and villages. When the dams fill the water is suddenly released creating tsunamis of floodwaters to descend on downstream towns and cities like Bankok. Southeast Asia has seen a massive increase in dam building in the last 10-15 years by China and other nations. These dams are enormous structures and are some of the largest dams ever built on earth. Most of Southeast Asia's rivers were pristine and relatively DAM FREE until about 20 years ago. Much of the hydro-electricity from these dams is shipped back to China via electrical transmission lines, also built by China. Most Thai citizens and the citizens of these other nations, in Southeast Asia, have no knowledge of these dams because they're often built in remote upstream jungle areas and receive little press when they're built, completed and they're reservoirs filled. China likes it like this.....less press....less controversy/protest. The dams also increase river stagnation downstream from the dams and reduces river water flows.....warming/stagnating downstream river water. This kills river fish which need cold fast-running river water.
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PebbleBeachBum
Bentley for life
11:34 PM on 11/06/2011
we have another person writting a novel that nobody will read.
04:37 AM on 11/07/2011
PebbleBeachBum, I read it and found the opinion interesting and well articulated. I suppose reading anything more than a couple of sentences taxes your intellect. Maybe that's the result of reading nothing but comic books and Tweets.

Are you yet another sheep spawned by mindless pop culture--the dumbed-down generation? Have you ever actually read a novel? Are you waiting for the 3-D animated movie version? Perhaps you were overwhelmed when confronted by several complete paragraphs on a page rather than "BANG! ZOOM! POW!" in a speech bubble.
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wayne123
11:42 PM on 11/06/2011
Actually Bangkok was built 600 years ago after the capital was moved from Ayutthaya. The problem is the tides are rising and now they are overflowing into the capital. Also the monsoon rains recently were excessive thruout the country. I talked to my wife tonight . She said the army delivered food and medicine to those needing it yesterday in our neighborhood. The flood waters are starting to recede in our neighborhood of Sai Noi, in Bang Yai province. There is a problem with snakes and crocodiles as they have also been displaced by the floods. Also now diseases are starting to effect people because of the polluted water in the streets and mesquitos carrying malaria.
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EdRea
Trees are our native friends.
07:08 AM on 11/07/2011
Wow, this is just terrible. My thoughts are with you and your family. There's not much I can do, personally, but I will donate what I can for flood relief there. I hope your wife stays safe.
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b525
10:25 PM on 11/06/2011
Bankok, like New Orleans in the U.S., is built in a river delta/river floodplain where massive tropical rivers drain into the Gulf of Thailand.....not the best place to build a city. Bankok was likely built by diverting massive amounts of river water, draining marshes/riverside floodplains and cutting down coastal mangrove forest. Sadly coastal mangrove forests, river delta marshes and riverside floodplains are the NURSERIES for much of the world's river and oceans fish. These marshes also absorb flood waters. We are now seeing dramatic declines of gamefish populations and marine life worldwide, because of destruction of these habitats. Wild ocean/river fish used to be the main source of protein for billions of people worldwide, but no longer. Growing numbers of coastal fish and shrimp farms are highly destructive/polluting and produce massive amounts of waste. Coastal shrimp farms, especially in countries like Thailand, are being built by cutting down Thailand's once vast coastal mangrove forests. This is also likely aggravating flooding/destroying fisheries.
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PebbleBeachBum
Bentley for life
11:35 PM on 11/06/2011
dude are you serioius. do you think people spend their time reading your eighteen paragraphs.? i bet you type like four words a minute and it took you four hours to type that. hahaha
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b525
10:25 PM on 11/06/2011
Thailand has been chumming up to neighboring Myanmar's military dictatorship government for years, so they can build hydro-power dams over the border in Myanmar, and also take timber, minerals and other natural resources from Myanmar, as Myanmar's tribal/rural people fall further into poverty/oppression by their military dictatorship government. Chumming up to a corrupt government never ends well for any country. After typhoon Nargis, Myanmar's paranoid dictatorship government blocked outside aid/relief groups from entering Myanmar because they thought they might be "spies" who would bring down their criminal rule/government. So as a result hundreds of thousands of Myanmar's citizens were left to drown/die of exposure/dehydration etc. Why has Thailand supported these thugs in Myanmar?
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PebbleBeachBum
Bentley for life
11:35 PM on 11/06/2011
if i only had the patience
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wayne123
11:45 PM on 11/06/2011
You are wrong. Thailand has not supported the government of Myanmar. They have been long standing enemies for centuries. Thai's do not trust the government of Myanmar.
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09:43 PM on 11/06/2011
It makes me sick to see that poor child up to his neck in that filthy water. What in the world are people thinking of to let this happen?
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PebbleBeachBum
Bentley for life
10:42 PM on 11/06/2011
that was a totally staged picture. if some guy could swim with him and take a photo with a camera...............staged.
02:11 PM on 11/07/2011
PebbleBrain, you've done it once again--provided glaring evidence that your capacity for complex, critical thought is as lacking as your reading and writing skills.

Did you consider that perhaps the photo was taken with a telephoto lens, or that the photographer was in a boat in front of the child? Do you doubt that the floodwater has encroached upon a third of the country and people, including children, are having to wade and swim in order to survive? Have you ever had to truly deal with the realities of life or are you a spoiled child living in the insulated bubble of an electronic fantasy world?

I can assure you the situation is real, as I know people who live there.

Step AWAY from the TV and your video games before your brain meltdown is complete and irreversible.
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11:36 PM on 11/06/2011
If this was staged someone needs to give the photographer a swift kick in the a--.
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AudreyLee
Don't block me bro
09:29 PM on 11/06/2011
That little kid shouldn't be in the water!! Gah!!!!
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Bill Hummel
01:29 AM on 11/07/2011
It worked for U.
09:10 PM on 11/06/2011
I wanted to pretend I was on vacation in Thailand, so I just did a belly-flop in my neighbor's cesspool.
08:08 PM on 11/06/2011
Not only does BIG OIL continually overcharge us; now
they've poisoned the ocean. This is one result of 'Christians'
driving those big GAS HOG SUV's. They help the Muslims more
than anyone. Reagan's deregulation has had many consequences.
The -hores Bush and Cheney were also in bed with big bank and
big oil. Bush had a robber baron presidency. He has done more for big oil and Muslim oil than any other leader ever. The Muslim leaders should worship him.
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wayne123
11:50 PM on 11/06/2011
Reagan didn't do the deregulation of gas and oil, it was carter.
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Bill Hummel
01:30 AM on 11/07/2011
with 7billion who gets what.?