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Thai Provinces Inundated‎ by Floods, Thirteen Dead

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A resident walks outside a flooded shop at Srimahaphot district in Prachin Buri province, east of Bangkok, on September 24, 2013. More than 600,000 Thais have been affected by flooding since July.Photo Chaiwat Subprasom

 

 

BANGKOK  – The flood in Thailand is expected to worsen as heavy rain is forecast to continue until next week, especially around the northern and eastern regions.

So far, 13 people have died and a total of 2.45 million of its 65 million population affected.

Widespread floods in 2011 killed more than 800 people and caused massive disruption to industry, cutting economic growth that year to just 0.1 percent.

Authorities discount the possibility of any similar disruption, but have expressed concern over one industrial estate in Ayutthaya province, 80 km (50 miles) north of Bangkok.

“We are monitoring Saha Rattana Nakorn complex in Ayutthaya, where flood walls are only 30 percent complete, but are confident that we will be able to take care of all industrial estates,” Chatchai Promlert, director general of the Disaster Prevention and Mitigation Department, told Reuters.

Ruangrit Kusolgambot, director of the estate which specializes in production of parts for global auto makers, told Reuters the water would not enter the compound.

“The water is a safe distance from our complex and water levels in surrounding areas have decreased significantly over the past few days” he said.

The national meteorological department forecast more rain for the coming weekend.

So far, around 1.5 million people living in 27 of Thailand’s 77 provinces have been affected by the floods. Nine districts have been evacuated.

Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra reassured businesses on Tuesday that there would be no repeat of the flooding that affected more than 13 million people in 2011.

A court has ordered the suspension of flood control projects worth 290 billion baht ($9.26 billion) undertaken as part of a campaign to reassure investors of improved flood defences. The projects had encountered legal delays and protests. By Amy Sawitta Lefevre

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