More than 6,100 people forced to flee and forecasters advise ships to stay ashore
Rain, wind and surging
seawater from a tropical storm have buffeted coastal villages and popular
tourist resorts on southern Thailand, knocking down
trees and utility poles, and flooding roads.
Holidaymakers were advised to avoid the area’s
east coast as tropical storm Pabuk brought 5m-high waves and winds of up
to 46mph.
One person was reported dead and another
missing after a fishing boat with a crew of six capsized in high waves.
Airlines and boat operators suspended
operations, beaches were closed and tourists were forced to change travel
plans.
More than 6,100 people across four provinces
had been forced to flee in advance, the Department of Disaster Prevention and
Mitigation said.
The Foreign Office has
advised Britons against all but essential travel to provinces on the
Thai-Malaysia borders that are expected to be hit by more torrential rain and
strong winds.
The Meteorological Department said it had
recorded winds of 40mph by the late afternoon, down from 47 mph when the storm
hit land shortly after midday.
There had been concerns that Pabuk would be
the worst storm to hit Thailand since 1989, when Typhoon Gay killed more than
400 people. But by nightfall it appeared less damage had been caused than was
feared.
However, the Meteorological Department
continued to warn of strong winds and waves of 3m-5m high in the Gulf of
Thailand and 2m-3m in the Andaman Sea.
It advised all ships to stay ashore tomorrow,
warning of possible storm surges on the Gulf coast.
Forecasters have also warned of possible flash
flooding in certain areas.
“We can expect heavy rain and downpours,
flooding and flash floods in the area throughout the night,” department chief
Phuwieng Prakhammintara said.
Evacuation efforts were especially intense in
Nakhon Si Thammarat province, about 480 miles south of Bangkok, where
authorities sent lorries through flooded streets with downed power lines,
urging people in danger zones to leave.
“You cannot stay here. It’s too dangerous,”
they repeated from loudspeakers on vehicles.
This is the height of the foreign visitor
season in Thailand, as many tourists head to Southeast Asia to catch some
winter sun.
Britons make over one million trips to the
country every year to visit popular islands such as Koh Phangnan, Koh Samui and
Koh Tao.
Katie Preston, 23, and Liam Bland, 29, from
Hartlepool, said they were stranded on the island of Koh Phangan after they
were allowed to take the last boat out from the mainland before services were
stopped.
The couple, who arrived in Thailand on Boxing
Day for a three-week holiday, criticised the lack of information they had
received.
“We hadn’t heard about any storm and none of
the staff we spoke to at Samui airport or at the boats mentioned it so we
didn’t know it was going to happen,” Ms Preston said.
0 comments:
Post a Comment