Floods in Thailand, Malaysia kill over 30, displace thousands
- Balitang Marino
- 5 hours ago
- 2 min read

BANGKOK, November 27 ------ The death toll from days of widespread flooding in southern Thailand rose to 33 with tens of thousands displaced in the country and neighboring Malaysia, officials said. The Thai government declared a state of emergency in southern Songkhla province with torrential rains since late last week inundating the tourist hub of Hat Yai and the southern region.
An image from Wednesday published by Agence France-Presse (AFP) showed murky brown floodwaters submerging streets and ground floors of residential buildings in Hat Yai. "Authorities say 33 people have died across seven provinces, with causes including flash floods, electrocution and drowning," Thai government spokesman Siripong Angkasakulkiat told reporters. "The water level is expected to recede in the south," he said.
Severe flooding has spread to seven southern provinces, home to several million people, the country’s disaster prevention and mitigation department said. The flooding since last week has stranded residents and travelers in their homes and hotels, with rescuers using boats, jet skis, and military trucks amid high floodwaters. The military has deployed aircraft carriers and mobilized helicopters to airlift patients to nearby hospitals, the army said. More than 10,000 people have been evacuated from their homes in Songkhla since last week, the province's public relations department said. University campuses have been converted into shelters for displaced people.
The Songkhla provincial administration said on Wednesday that it had set up food centers capable of distributing up to 20,000 food boxes a day to flood victims. Thailand regularly records heavy rainfall from June to September, but experts say human-induced climate change has intensified extreme weather, making conditions increasingly unpredictable.
More rain ahead
In neighboring Malaysia, flooding from days of heavy rain swept through eight states, with forecasters predicting more rain in the region in the coming days. More than 27,000 people were evacuated to dozens of temporary shelters this week, with one death recorded in one of the worst-hit states, Kelantan, on the northeastern coast, rescue officials said.
The Malaysian Meteorological Department has warned that thunderstorms will continue until Wednesday in the northern states of Perlis, Kedah, Penang, and Perak. Floods are an annual phenomenon in the nation of 34 million people due to the northeast monsoon that brings heavy rain from November to March.
Malaysia's foreign ministry on Tuesday said it was monitoring the flooding across the border after thousands of Malaysian holidaymakers were stranded in hotels in southern Thailand last week. "Most of the affected Malaysians had been staying in multistory hotels and have been accounted for," the ministry said in a statement. As of Monday, "more than 6,300 Malaysians have safely crossed the border out of Thailand and safely arrived in Malaysia."
Source: manilatimes.net

