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37 dead as landslides and floods hit Vietnam

37 killed as floods and landslides hit north and central region

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Country suffers one of the highest death tolls recorded.

HANOI: Floods caused by a tropical depression in Vietnam killed 37 people, one of the highest death tolls recorded in the country from flooding, the disaster prevention agency said.

Forty people were missing and 21 others were injured after rains caused landslides and flooding, mostly in northern and central Vietnam.

“Our entire village had sleepless nights ... it’s impossible to fight against this water, it’s the strongest in years,” Ngo Thi Su, a resident in north-western Hoa Binh province, was quoted as saying by state-run Vietnam Television (VTV).

Vietnam often suffers from destructiv­e storms and floods due to its long coastline. More than 200 people were killed in storms last year.

A typhoon tore a destructiv­e path across central Vietnam last month, flooding and damaging homes and knocking out power lines.

The latest floods hit Vietnam on Monday.

Vietnam’s Central Steering Committee for Natural Disaster Prevention and Control said authoritie­s were dischargin­g water from dams to control water levels.

In a report, it said more than 17,000 households have been evacuated and more than 200 homes have collapsed, while nearly 18,000 other houses were submerged or damaged.

It said more than 8,000ha of land growing rice was damaged and around 40,000 animals were killed or washed away.

Hoa Binh province in the north- west declared a state of emergency and opened eight gates to discharge water at Hoa Binh dam, Vietnam’s largest hydroelect­ric dam, the first time it has done so in years, VTV reported.

Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc visited northern Ninh Binh province where water levels in the Hoang Long river are at their highest since 1985.

Rising sea levels are also threatenin­g Vietnam’s more than 3,260km coastline, resulting in increased flooding of low-lying coastal regions, erosion and salt water intrusion.

Floods have also affected seven of 77 provinces in Thailand, Vietnam’s neighbour to the west, the Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation said yesterday.

More than 480,000ha of agricul- tural land have been affected, the department said.

Thailand is the world’s second biggest exporter of rice.

“It is still too soon to tell whether there will be damage to rice crops because most of the rice has already been harvested,” Charoen Laothamata­s, president of the Thai Rice Exporters Associatio­n, said. — Reuters

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 ??  ?? Widespread inundation: Men wading through a flooded road near a bridge over a river that has burst its banks in the central province of Nghe An. — AFP
Widespread inundation: Men wading through a flooded road near a bridge over a river that has burst its banks in the central province of Nghe An. — AFP

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