China Daily

Floods sever Thai overland routes

- By AGENCE FRANCEPRES­SE in Surat Thani, Thailand

Overland routes to Thailand’s flood-hit south were severed on Tuesday after two bridges collapsed following days of torrential rain that has killed at least 25 people, including a five-year-old girl.

The heaviest January rains for three decades have lashed the country’s southern neck for more than a week, affecting 1.1 million people across 11 provinces.

The unseasonal downpours have also put a dampener on Thailand’s peak tourist period, prompting cancellati­ons on popular resort islands including Samui and Phangan.

On Tuesday morning, the main road heading down Thailand’s southern neck — Highway 4 — was closed in Prachuab Kiri Khan province, four hours south of Bangkok.

“We stopped all vehicles from passing after two bridges collapsed on Highway 4,” a Highways Department spokesman said.

Trains south have also been stopped by the rising floodwater­s, increasing demand on already stretched flights to and from the flood-ravaged region.

The death toll has crept up recently as floods have reached rooftop level in some areas.

A five-year-old girl in Prachuab province became the latest victim when a flash flood hit a van she was traveling in on Monday.

“Her family climbed to the roof of the van to avoid the water but she fell in with her mother,” said relief worker Rawiroj Thammee.

“The girl was swept away ... villagers found her body 200 meters from the van this morning (Tuesday).”

January usually brings visitors flocking to the south’s islands and pristine beaches as monsoon rains abate and temperatur­es ease.

But the region has been battered by what Prime Minister Prayut Chan-O-Cha described as the heaviest January rainfall in 30 years.

Vast tracts of the south — which is also an agricultur­al hub for rubber, palm oil and fruit plantation­s — have been left under water while flash floods have caused deaths and widespread damage.

Television images have shown villagers wading through muddy water in remote flooded hamlets, with a few salvaged belongings held above their heads.

Soldiers have been deployed to provide relief packages and rescue stranded people in the worst-hit areas.

Patients were evacuated by canoes as a hospital was swamped with waters in Prachuab province.

The rain is forecast to slacken over the next 24 hours.

We stopped all vehicles from passing after two bridges collapsed on Highway 4.” Highways Department spokesman

 ?? TUWAEDANIY­A MERINGING / AFP ?? A man paddles a canoe over a flooded field at a village in Nakhon Si Thammarat, Thailand, on Monday.
TUWAEDANIY­A MERINGING / AFP A man paddles a canoe over a flooded field at a village in Nakhon Si Thammarat, Thailand, on Monday.

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