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French Tourist Killed by Flashfloods Prachin Buri Province

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Remi Huet, a 30-year-old French tourist, was killed by flashfloods while bicycling in a national park in Prachin Buri province

 

CHAINRGAI TIMES – Remi Huet, a 30-year-old French tourist, was killed by flashfloods while bicycling in a national park in Prachin Buri province, 135 km (218 miles) northeast of Bangkok. His body was found a km (0.62 mile) from the cycling track on Sunday

Soldiers and emergency workers on Sunday retrieved the body of a French tourist who was swept away and drowned by raging floodwaters here last night while crossing a waterway at Prachin Buri’s Pai Khao Lam waterfall amid heavy rain.

The team worked all night but suspended their search at times due to poor weather until recovering the body at about 10am Sunday.

His body was brought to a military hospital for medical autopsy pending collection by his family.

Remi Huet, 30-years-old, a French tourist

Mr Huet reportedly visited the waterfall with three friends, including Chana Prasitthiwej, a Thai who told police that he was the victim’s business partner. They had been cycling and stopped at the waterfall where the Frenchman was the last person crossing the waterway.

His friends tried to save his life but to no avail as the strong current quickly swept his body away. They then called for help from nearby villagers and the local authorities..

Monsoon rains, floods and mudslides in Thailand have killed at least 98 people since July, including a French tourist, authorities said on Friday, posing a test for the new government of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra.

Flooding in 29 of Thailand’s 76 provinces has destroyed or damaged more then 300,000 homes, authorities said, briefly sinking parts of resort city Pattaya in waist-high water and causing the evacuation of 79 elephants from a farm in Ayutthaya.

About a 1.3 million acres of farm land is under water — about eight times the size of Singapore.

“Twenty-one provinces in north and northeast have been warned of flash flooding and landslides,” the Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation said in a statement on Friday.

The floods began after tropical storm Nock-ten battered Southeast Asia in late July, killing more than 50 people in the Philippines before bearing down on Vietnam and Thailand.

Heavy rain and floods, part of the August-to-October monsoon season, damaged paddy fields but not enough to significantly cut output in the world’s top rice exporter, industry sources said.

Many farms have expanded plantation acreage in recent years to offset slight falls in production from flood damage. Thailand was expected to produce 25.1 million tonnes of paddy this year, up from 24 million tonnes the previous year.

Several roads in northern Thailand remained cut off and trains have faced significant delays.

By next week, flood waters could reach parts of Bangkok, which sits only two metres (6 ft 7 inches) above sea level, causing the capital’s Chao Phraya river to overflow onto roads in some areas, although authorities have reinforced its banks to prevent serious flooding

Yingluck’s month-old government approved 800 million baht (17 million pounds) in compensation for households affected by floods.

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