Race to save the stranded


Safe above the surge: Vehicles parked on an elevated road to keep them out of flood waters in Hat Yai in Thailand’s southern Songkhla province, as severe flooding affected thousands of people in the country’s south following days of heavy rain. — Arnun Chonmahatrakool/Thai News/AFP

THE country is preparing to send an aircraft carrier with relief supplies and medical teams to its south, where more heavy rain intensified the worst floods in years, which have killed 13 people and hobbled rescue and evacuation efforts.

Floodwaters running as high as 2m in some areas have hit nine Thai provinces and eight states in neighbouring Malaysia, across a swathe of hundreds of kilometres devastated last year by seasonal monsoon floods that killed 12.

The Thai navy said it was readying to send a flotilla of 14 boats and the aircraft carrier, Chakri Naruebet, accompanied by helicopters, doctors, supplies and field kitchens that can supply 3,000 meals a day.

“The fleet is ready to deliver forces and carry out actions as the Royal Navy orders,” it said in a statement, adding that the carrier could also serve as a floating hospital.

An estimated 1.9 million people have been affected in Thailand, where the meteorology agency forecast sustained heavy rain and flash floods yesterday and warned small boats to stay ashore to avoid waves taller than 3m.

“Calls have been coming in non-stop in the last three days, in the thousands, asking to be evacuated and others for food,” said a member of the volunteer group, the Matchima Rescue Centre, in the worst affected city of Hat Yai.

Holding on for dear life: A man clinging to a wall in a flooded street after being swept there while going out to get food supplies in Hat Yai district. — Reuters
Holding on for dear life: A man clinging to a wall in a flooded street after being swept there while going out to get food supplies in Hat Yai district. — Reuters

The rubber trading centre is Thailand’s fifth largest city, where authorities have ordered evacuation after days of rain that Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul said had brought the worst flooding in 15 years.

“We are five people and a small child without rice and water,” Facebook user The Hong Tep posted in an appeal for help on the Matchima group’s page.

“Phone reception has been cut – water is rising fast.”

Hat Yai, also popular with Malaysian visitors, received 335mm of rain on Friday, its highest in a single day in three centuries.

Television images showed brown waters rushing through its commercial streets, while residents waded through high waters, clinging to floating polystyrene boxes as rubber boats evacuated others in orange life vests.

The waters submerged cars and flowed around a fire truck abandoned in a street.

The floods could wreak disruption in Thailand’s rubber industry, among the world’s largest producers and exporters of the commodity, where the government rubber agency has estimated the rains could cut output by about 10,300 tonnes.

Posts from stranded people desperate for help ran into the thousands on the Facebook page of Hat Yai’s Matchima rescue group.

“Water is on the second floor now,” wrote one of them, Pingojung Ping, who said she was one of six trapped, two elderly people among them. “Pray. Please help.” — Reuters

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