PeterRS Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago Reports indicate that the south of the country has been hit by its worst rainfall in 300 years. Ten Provinces have been hit with the city of Hat Yai being the worst. It experienced 335 mm in a single day. Desperate residents are perched on rooftops. More than 2 million peope have been affected. Military ships including an aircraft carrier with supplies, a flotilla of boats and rescue helicopters have been mobiised to help residents. 33 have aleady died. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckg97wx144jo Hat Yai: photo Weerapong Narongkul Bangkok Post Vessey, floridarob and khaolakguy 3 Quote
Keithambrose Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 2 hours ago, PeterRS said: Reports indicate that the south of the country has been hit by its worst rainfall in 300 years. Ten Provinces have been hit with the city of Hat Yai being the worst. It experienced 335 mm in a single day. Desperate residents are perched on rooftops. More than 2 million peope have been affected. Military ships including an aircraft carrier with supplies, a flotilla of boats and rescue helicopters have been mobiised to help residents. 33 have aleady died. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckg97wx144jo Hat Yai: photo Weerapong Narongkul Bangkok Post I took off from Suvarnabhumi on Monday, and after about 5 mins, all you could see was flooding everywhere, it went on for many miles, roads disappeared, isolated patches of high ground. Odd houses, otherwise just water. Quote
llz Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago Five minutes after taking off from Suwannaphum, you were not flying above Hat Yai for sure. What you saw was the Central plains where the situation on the ground is now much less critical than it seems when looking from above. Quote