Monday, August 18, 2008

Destructive flooding puts Southeast Asia at risk

This picture says it all...
clipped from www.iht.com
A man pulls his boat through floodwaters at Xiengkuane Buddha Park, about 25 kilometers, or 16 miles, east of Vientiane, the capital of Laos, on Saturday. (Reuters)

Flooding has also hit parts of Thailand, Cambodia and Laos as well as Myanmar, where waters rose in the Irrawaddy Delta, which is still recovering from a cyclone that left 38,000 people dead or missing in May.

In Vientiane, the capital of Laos, officials said the Mekong River had brought the worst flooding in memory, rising to nearly 14 meters, or 45 feet, above its lowest level in the dry season. The high water in Vientiane broke a record set in 1966 and overflowed a levee that was built after that flood.

In Vietnam's southern Mekong delta, where the 4,345-kilometer, or 2,700-mile, river flows into the sea, forecasters said that rising waters had reached a critical level two weeks earlier than last year and that worse flooding lay ahead.

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