Struggling to Survive Bangkok's Worsening Floods
Struggling to Survive Bangkok's Worsening Floods
By Richard S. EhrlichBANGKOK, Thailand -- Worsening floods, which killed 506 people, are inundating more of Bangkok, prompting warnings about how to avoid disease, electrocution, crocodiles and other dangers in the infectious, garbage-strewn water which thousands of people are wading through to reach food, work, hospitals and transportation.
The government is unable to stop sabotage by angry residents who are punching holes through some dikes, sluice gates and sandbag walls to drain deep, stagnant water from their neighborhoods which are on the wrong side of Bangkok's barriers.
"If the government cannot control the protesters...all districts will be flooded," said Bangkok's deputy governor Thirachon Manopaipibul.
Since July, one-third of this Buddhist-majority, Southeast Asian nation has suffered from storm-fed floods which have swelled above people's waists, and at some locations over their heads.
Foul-smelling, brownish-black water has also been moving south across Bangkok at about one mile a day.
On Monday (Nov. 7), about 60 percent of the city was under some water, which continued to smother more homes, shops, factories, roads and other infrastructure.
"Foreigners will lose confidence in us, and wonder why we cannot save our own capital," Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra said while asking squabbling officials to cooperate.
Bangkok's glitzy, bustling, tourist-friendly inner streets have remained mostly dry thanks to reinforced canals, dikes, sluice gates and more than one million sandbags, enabling government offices, embassies, luxury shopping malls, five-star hotels, condominiums and mansions to function alongside slums, markets and riverside port facilities.
But that dry urban space is shrinking.
As a result, Bangkok's population of about 10 million people have become increasingly pessimistic and distrustful of the government's ability to protect the capital, provide relief or quickly drain the water which is predicted to take four to six weeks to disappear.
People in Bangkok's dry downtown live in a parallel universe, enjoying relatively normal lives, going to work, eating in restaurants and shopping.
But they are also nervously stockpiling food, drinking water and other supplies, while remaining glued to non-stop TV, radio and internet updates about where the floods are advancing across Bangkok's western, northern and eastern suburbs.
"Floodwaters are now threatening to inundate the entire capital," said a Bangkok Post editorial on Thursday (Nov. 3).
For many residents, the approaching floods have created primal fears of how to survive with dwindling drinking water and food, a possible loss of electricity, and increasing isolation in homes surrounded by water carrying garbage, excrement, infectious bacteria, toxic chemicals and an occasional animal carcass.
Thousands of have fled the capital to live in hotels, or with relatives elsewhere in Thailand, or joined 3,000 people in emergency shelters which have, in some cases, been forced to relocate after floods seeped into their sites.
But most people in Bangkok appear determined to tough it out, including many who are wading each day -- up to their knees, waist or neck -- to get fresh food and drinking water, or medical care.
For many people, getting to and from jobs includes wearing shorts and sandals to wade from home to board whatever transport is available and, after arriving, changing into office clothes.
Hospitals are running low on blood supplies, short of staff, and have evacuated many patients.
More than 13,000 air force troops retreated to other cities from their main base in Bangkok's flooded Don Muang airport, and relocated armored personnel carriers and U.S.-supplied C-130 military transport planes.
Irreplaceable film and book archives have been destroyed.
Many shops have shut down, enabling profiteers to increase prices for food, plastic rowboats, rubber boots and other items, while temporary apartments in high-rise buildings are filling up.
"Our much-flustered Commerce Minister says if eggs cost too much, eat something else," wrote columnist Thirasant Mann on Saturday (Nov. 5).
"Cake? Makes one pray they bring back the guillotine."
Thai media is teaching people how to create a do-it-yourself toilet by cutting a hole in a cheap plastic, four-legged stool, inserting a garbage bag, and straddling the hole on the stool's flat seat.
White-collar executives have been reduced to tears in their offices, describing how their newly purchased or recently renovated homes are now heavily flooded, destroying their automobiles and other possessions.
Near Bangkok's Phahonyothin Road, a hurriedly constructed, small wooden pier sticks out from a building's front door, across a water-covered sidewalk and into the flooded street, allowing people to arrive and depart by small boats servicing the public in knee-deep water.
Bangkok's elevation averages only six feet above sea level.
The flat, sprawling capital is built on floodplain and is cut in two halves by the Chao Phraya river which drains the country's rains into the Gulf of Thailand, 15 miles further south.
At least 506 people have died nationwide, officials said, but no deaths were reported in Bangkok.
On a Twitter site #ThaiFloodEng, set up to exchange reliable information in English, people denounce the confused government's contradictory statements and post their own photos and eyewitness accounts, advising how deep the floods are on specific streets, where food and drinking water can be found, and other emergency information.
"Green mamba antidotes have arrived in Thailand," several people posted, after officials said 15 of deadly, bright green African snakes might have escaped from a collector and be loose in Bangkok's floods.
Earlier, officials warned that an unknown number of crocodiles escaped from flooded zoos, and several have been captured, tied up, and taken away by proud hunters.
"Fish swimming on the front porch," someone nicknamed "bkkbase" posted on the Twitter site, describing his stricken neighborhood.
When rising water approached one underground subway station, people worried that Bangkok's entire Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) system could be shut.
"The MRT is a perfect living environment for crocs. Don't u think? Just come up for breakfast when they like," tweeted Lee Webster.
Richard S Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based
journalist from San Francisco, California. He has reported
news from Asia since 1978 and is co-author of the
non-fiction book of investigative journalism, Hello My Big
Big Honey! Love Letters to Bangkok Bar Girls and Their
Revealing Interviews.
His website is
http://www.asia-correspondent.110mb.com
(Copyright 2011 Richard S Ehrlich)