Thai floods devastating as prevention advice ignored

After flood waters and mudslides from a mountain razed seven villages in the northern Thai province of Phetchabun, killing at least 70, with dozens more missing, the United Nations’ Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP)’s Executive Secretary, Kim Hak-Su, had stern words for authorities. “Twelve years ago southern Thailand experienced similar type of disasters to what is going on now in the north,” he said. “An ESCAP expert team at the invitation of the Government had visited the area, and made a number of recommendations. It appears that the recommended measures for prevention of such hazards elsewhere in the country have gone unheeded.”

The original ESCAP, comprising experts in water resources and flood protection, geology, agriculture, environment, and human settlements, had recommended both short and long-term measures, when the southern part of the country experienced extensive landslides at the end of 1988. These included:

“Many other parts of Thailand face similar hazards and lessons must be learned from the past and present disasters in order to take adequate and appropriate preventive measures against such hazards,” Kim said, while an ESCAP flood expert said that “now is not too late” to implement plans. Thailand’s prime minister, Thaksin Shinawatra, visiting the region said that in future water flow routes would be identified and villages built elsewhere, to prevent a repeat of the current devastation.

Meanwhile, Iran’s official news agency, IRNA, has reported that the northeast of the country has experienced its worst floods for two centuries, with at least 217 dead and over 350 people still missing. Thousands have been evacuated to higher ground as a result of the floods, which followed torrential rain in the Golestan and Khorasan provinces, which destroyed over 80 kilometres (50 miles) of roads, as well as 37,000 hectares of valuable farmland. The floods, which President Mohammad Khatami has described as a huge disaster, followed the worst drought in 30 years in the region. The news agency made no mention of an inquiry into flood prevention measures.

In the same week, floodwaters from a swollen Nile which had been predicted to submerge large parts of the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, appeared to be receding when edie was published. However, the United Nations’ Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN) said that the extensive flooding in northern and eastern Sudan in the past few weeks had destroyed crops and aggravated chronic food insecurity. Following two consecutive years of serious drought, flooding has exacerbated the “already precarious food supply situation” along the Nile, including areas around Khartoum, it said.