Buriram Times

South Hit By Severe Flooding-Four Dead

  • By: Buriram Times
  • Date: 6th January 2017
  • Time to read: 3 min.
Flooding caused bridge to collapse.

Severe flooding continued to ravage many parts of the South including Nakhon Si Thammarat, Trang and Phatthalung provinces yesterday, affecting tens of thousands of people, damaging property and interrupting transportation. Four deaths from the flooding were reported, two in Nakhon Si Thammarat and two in Phatthalung .

Trains to the lower South could go no further than Surat Thani as the Thung Song Train Station in Nakhon Si Thammarat had to be closed due to flooded rail tracks. Also yesterday, Transport Co Ltd suspended buses scheduled to go through the heavily flooded Thung Song district.

In addition to this, four inter-provincial bus services operated by private concessionaires to Hat Yai-Chumphon, Hat Yai-Surat Thani, Hat Yai-Thung Song and Hat Yai-Nakhon Si Thammarat have also been suspended. As of 1.30pm, Transport Co resumed all services as the buses were able to re-route via No 401 Road through Surat Thani-Nakhon Trang, though journeys take an hour or two longer than usual. The company said those not wanting to spend more time on the bus can get refunds.

With more than 200 millimetres of rain hitting Nakhon Si Thammarat, provincial governor Charoen Thippongthada set up a disaster-prevention centre at City Hall to provide aid to the flood victims. In Noppitam district torrential forest runoffs in Klong Klai of Tambon Noppitam kept rising, prompting officials to monitor the situation closely, while many roads in Tambon Krung Ching were left impassable. The Klong Klai Bridge broke, forcing residents to use sling cables to cross the canal.

Khao Luang National Park chief Wikran Tuadao warned mountainside residents to evacuate as this year’s forest runoffs were higher than the previous year’s levels. The bodies of a father and son were found in a car that floods had swept into the canal. Other than Thung Song, where the electricity was cut as a precaution, Ron Phibun and Phra Phrom districts were also inundated.

Meanwhile, six districts in Phatthalung province remained under water, and two deaths from drowning were reported in Khuan Khanun district – those of an 18-year-old girl and a 56-year-old man. The Phatthalung disaster-prevention office said yesterday that flooding since Monday had affected 58,676 residents in 11 districts, though property damage was still being assessed.

In Trang, forest runoffs from the Banthat Mountain Range in Na Yong district hit communities in downstream Muang district’s Nakhon Trang Municipality, and caused roads to be congested with 30 to 60-centimetre high water logging. More than 10 schools suspended classes, while the outbound lanes of Phatthalung Road near Wattanapat Trang Hospital and Phraya Ratsadanupradit Monument were closed amid rising water levels.

It was reported that this second flooding had affected some 15,000 residents and damaged more than 10,000 rai of farmland in Na Yong, Huay Yot, Rassada, Muang, Wang Wiset and Palian districts – the first three of which had already been declared disaster zones.

In Surat Thani, over 10 districts face flooding due tocontinuous rainfall . They have already been declared as disaster zones and 50 schools were closed indefinitely, while a kilometre of the Asia Highway in Tha Chana district was under 30cm of water. Kanchanadit district’s Tambon Pa Ron and Tambon Klong Sa continued being hit by Khao Luang runoffs and some residents were left marooned in their flooded homes, while many other families had to evacuate and move their belongings to higher ground.

The Meteorological Department yesterday warned of persistent rains and flash flooding in the provinces of Prachuap Khiri Khan, Chumphon, Surat Thani, Nakhon Si Thammarat, Phatthalung, Ranong, Phang Nga, Phuket and Krabi, though the rains are set of ease off by Sunday.

(Source: The Nation, Thailand)

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