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Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
Environment
POST REPORTERS

Entire Songkhla flooded, runoff ravages South

All 16 districts in Songkhla are hit by flooding which also ravages other southern provinces. (Photo by Aswin Pakkawan)

All 16 districts of Songkhla have been hit by flash floods that continued to ravage several southern provinces.

Wasant Chaithaweepong, acting chief of Songkhla provincial disaster prevention and mitigation office, said on Friday that the flooding had now expanded to all 16 districts of the province, with Thepha, Na Thawi, and Saba Yoi districts badly affected.

In Na Thawi district, forest runoff swept through downtown Muang district on Friday. Two main roads linking the district to the Thai-Malaysian border -- Na Thawi-Lamplai and Na Thawi-Dan Prakop roads --were inundated while floodwaters kept rising, said Mr Wasant.

In Nakhon Si Thammarat, the floodwater rose to over 1.5m in some areas in Muang district on Friday. 

The Royal Irrigation Department and the Muang municipality installed water pumps along main canals to drain water around the clock. Several schools suspended classes on Friday.

The flooding has expanded to other areas in 23 districts of Nakhon Si Thammarat. Of them, 15 districts have been declared disaster zones.

Provincial authorities ordered local authorities to survey the damage to flood-hit areas in this southern province.

One resident drowned while moving belongings in his flooded house in Muang district on Friday.

So far, the flooding has hit 526 villages in Nakhon Si Thammarat, affecting 66,020 people in 23,371 households.  

One school, seven temples, five government offices, 138 roads, six bridges and five bridge necks were damaged during the flooding. Damages to agricultural areas, fisheries and livestock were being surveyed.

A main road in Nakhon Si Thammarat is inundated. So far, 15 out of 23 districts have been declared disaster zones. (Photo by Nujaree Raekrun)

In Surat Thani, residents living in Kanchanadit district were told to move their belongings to higher areas as runoff from nearby Nop Phi Tam district of Nakhon Si Thammarat would flow into the district.

Surat Thani governor Witchawut Chinto on Friday led a team of officials from responsible agencies to inspect communities prone to flooding in Kanchanadit district.

In Trang, a 39-year-old nurse drowned after her car was swept into a canal in Ratsada district.

Police rushed to Khlong Kham canal in tambon Khuan Mao and found the Toyota car with a Trang licence plate in the canal after being alerted at around 3.30am on Friday. 

The driver, identified later as Sumalee Khaenyuk, 39, a nurse at Ratsada Hospital, was found drowned in the wreckage of her vehicle.

A police investigation found that Sumalee was driving to the hospital, about 10 km from her house, for a night shift work. At the time, it rained heavily and several road sections were bumpy and flooded. This might have caused her to lose control of the vehicle, said police.

The Meteorological Department on Friday issued a weather warning for 13 provinces in the South.

The department reported that a lower-pressure area covering Malaysia and the lower South of Thailand is moving to the Andaman Sea. Outbreaks of continuous rain are forecast with torrential downpours in much of the South on Friday.

It warned residents to prepare for possible flash floods and inshore surges on Dec 1. Affected areas are Surat Thani, Nakhon Si Thammarat, Phatthalung, Songkhla, Pattani, Yala, Narathiwat, Ranong, Phangna, Phuket, Krabi, Trang and Satun.

There is a possibility of strong wind waves in the Gulf of Thailand and the Andaman Sea rising 2-3 metres high. All ships should proceed with caution and small boats should be ashore.

A man wades through floodwater in Muang district, Songkhla. (Photo by Aswin Pakkawan)
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