Flooding in Thailand has already claimed at least 250 lives. With Bangkok under threat, things could get worse.
http://the-diplomat.com/2011/10/10/inside-the-thailand-flood-zone/
AYUTTHAYA, Thailand – “I was scared, worried. I still am, but thanks to these helpers I have my Sililak safe”. Thanarat ‘Yui’ Panomai went from furrowed-brow anxiety to beaming smile in the time it took for the South 21 rescue team to wade through chest-high water to rescue her five year old daughter, trapped upstairs by an overnight rush of water into previously-dry sections of the city.

With neck-high water in places, boats are needed to get around (Photo: Simon Roughneen)
Flooding in Thailand has killed over 250 people, cut off roadways and forced some multinational corporations to shut down operations. 60 out of Thailand’s 77 provinces have been affected, and on Sunday night Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra said that residents of capital Bangkok residents should prepare for potential flooding.

Thanarat Panomai and daughter Sililak after rescue (Photo: Simon Roughneen)
Her government has set up a flood ‘war room’ at Bangkok’s old international airport, and the massive city – a mix of plush high-rises and vulnerable low-lying houses – could face a deluge as the Chao Praya river and the city’s network of canals well-up. More heavy rain and the flood run-off from the swamped north of the country will have no outlet into the Gulf of Thailand, with a high tides scheduled for the end of the coming week.
On Sunday afternoon city governor Sukhumband Paribatra held a ceremony asking water gods to spare the Thai capital – which sits on a low-lying delta – the inundation affecting Ayutthaya, the old Siamese capital and once one of the world’s major cities before being destroyed by the invading Burmese in In 1767.
At the flood frontline, however, South 21 rescue team leader Ronayuth Kulapantha says he has been doing the hour drive out from capital Bangkok for the past four days, staying late in Ayutthaya each day with his two-dozen member team to assist with the relief effort.
“Tonight could be the longest one yet”, he said, as word came through that an embankment elsewhere in the city had given way flooding an industrial estate.
Farther inside Ayutthaya, where the spectacular remnants of the old Siamese capital are a tourist draw, a mass evacuation was underway, with locals and rescuers wading through waist and chest high water, hopping on trucks and boats, and moving to higher ground with whatever belongings they could extricate from the deluge. On a boat heading toward the hospital, we passed a sign pointing toward the city’s Floating Market, an irony only bettered by travelogues who in the past described Ayutthaya as “the Venice of the East”.

Ayutthaya's landmark temples under water (Photo: Simon Roughneen)
Trying to get to the famous Chai Wattanaram temple proved impossible, however, with fast-rising waters washing into the temple grounds. “It is too dangerous”, chimed a group of men lounging at the floodwater’s edge, about 700 meters away from the ruins. They were renting boats out to journalists seeking to photograph the part-submerged ruins in recent days. Now, the say that “the water is too high and too fast”, pointing to an adjacent rush of whitewater to buttress their point, and make it clear that no matter what money was offered for a quick boat-trip down to the temple, they were not interested.

Thai Red Cross volunteer Pipath Cheangnoi explains the evacuation (Photo: Simon Roughneen)
Back outside the city’s hospital, Thai Red Cross volunteer Pipath Cheangnoi said he was asked by Government officials to help co-ordinate the evacuation of over 2,000 patients trapped inside the building – an effort that was ongoing as darkness fell, amid dangerous conditions with electricity down or unusable, and strong currents swirling in places around the hospital gates. A half-hour earlier, South 21 evacuated two men who had been electrocuted after floodwaters covered the wired-up downstairs part of their houses.
“We are going to have to stay here til the job is done”, Pipath said, as Thai army trucks rolled up to the gates to receive the first batch of evacuees.
Homes and businesses are literally-swamped all over the city, with city’s residents hopping on and off big-wheel trucks and diggers to hitch a lift through deeper water. Elsewhere, men pulled small boats along, only their heads visible above the water-line, with children and supplies being towed along behind – a grueling effort though a kilometer or so of neck-high water covering some of the city’s main streets.
Not everyone is leaving, however. Sasikarn Kornair stirred what looked to be over a dozen chicken fillets sizzling away under oil and above a gas-lit burner, inside her Arthika restaurant around the corner from the hospital. “We have three stories here, so we should be OK”, she said, “we won’t go anywhere yet”.

Inside Sasikarn Kornair's restaurant (Photo: Simon Roughneen)
But elsewhere, people in lower-lying one-story houses have no choice, and all day groups of people clambered onboard all sorts of dinghies, rafts and impromptu vessels cobbled together from truck tyre tubes, styrofoam board, or anything that floats. Others just waded through the water, while some children splashed around,, diving of the tops of almost-submerged vehicles and oblivious to the chorus of car and house alarms ringing in stereo, the background white noise whine giving the scene a hint of Hollywood apocalypse parody.
A woman giving her name as Noi shouted up to South 21 volunteers as they made their way toward another of Ayutthaya’s car-stacked overpasses – sanctuary on concrete stilts for those vehicles not yet swamped. “There are thirty monks in a temple inside”, she said, waving an arm toward a submerged gate, “they need help”. “We’ll be back as soon as we can”, reassured Ronayuth Kulapantha.

Evacuation from Ayutthaya hospital (Photo: Simon Roughneen)

Not willing to leave her home just yet (Photo: Simon Roughneen)

Heavy lifting needed to get people and property out (Photo: Simon Roughneen)

People on the move, from truck to boat (Photo: Simon Roughneen)

Getting out (Photo: Simon Roughneen)
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