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Search Result for “flood threat”

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LIFE

'Liveable future' at risk, UN climate report warns

AFP, Published on 28/02/2022

» PARIS: A landmark UN report warned Monday that time had nearly run out to ensure a "liveable future" for all, detailing a horrifying "atlas of human suffering" and warning that far worse was to come.

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LIFE

An all-too-familiar sight

Life, Thana Boonlert, Published on 21/09/2021

» Torrential rain has recently left many areas underwater. Last month, it caused flash flooding and forest runoff in the northern provinces. Caught off guard, residents climbed onto rooftops as water swept into their properties.

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LIFE

Against the currents

Life, Published on 21/04/2021

» Through disasters, a fellowship was struck. Ormboon Thipsuna remembers the date well, Aug 12, 2008, when a deluge of water from the Mekong swept through her hometown of Nong Khai and seven riparian northeastern provinces. Considering the rainfall was rather small and the Mekong's gradual seasonal pace of fluctuations, many locals believed the sudden mega-flood, at times water levels went up as high as 13m, was caused by China's dams upstream. Importantly, Ormboon got to know Niwat Roykaew, aka "Kru Tee", founder of the Rak Chiang Khong group based in Chiang Rai province.

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LIFE

Preserving history

Life, Pichaya Svasti, Published on 30/04/2018

» Ruins and ancient sites are always under threat from time and disaster. The great flood of 2011, for instance, damaged 128 archeological sites on and around the city island of Ayutthaya. After the incident, the government provided a budget of 600 million baht for the clean-up and restoration work, and there was also financial and technical aid from Unesco, as well as certain foreign countries.

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LIFE

Preserving literary heritage

Life, Pichaya Svasti, Published on 09/04/2018

» At Wat Sung Men in Phrae province, monks and a dozen local villagers are busy scanning the temple's old manuscripts into a computer. The same activity, in fact, is happening at several temples in the North, including Wat Phra That Si Chom Thong in Chiang Mai as well as others in Lamphun and Nan. Initiated by a German professor, the novel efforts of digitising and conserving ancient manuscripts have caught on with enthusiasm among locals.

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LIFE

When Chinatown is no longer Chinese

Life, Ariane Kupferman-Sutthavong, Published on 25/01/2017

» To visitors, Yaowarat comes to life when the gold shops' tall windows go dark and neon signs burn bright on top of buildings. As night falls, the main street of Bangkok's Chinatown transforms into a lively canteen, buzzing with vendors and noise and cars. Tourists, sitting on plastic stools as they wait for their seafood dishes to be served, flood the pavements. Their overflow on the road causes drivers to manoeuvre their cars in stop-motion, honking at each other.

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LIFE

The F word

B Magazine, Andrew Biggs, Published on 26/06/2016

» Affable Bangkok Governor Sukhumbhand Paribatra eschews the "f" word. He's made it clear that from now on, he never wants to hear it again.

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LIFE

A life lived in camera

B Magazine, Sithikorn Wongwudthianun, Published on 01/01/2016

» When the water cannon fires and the tear gas shoots overhead, one group is not running away _ although we are keen not to break our equipment. Press photographers are among those rare people _ like emergency service personnel _ who run towards danger, whether it's a violent political demonstration, massive flood or a crime scene.

LIFE

Dam if you do, Dam-if-you-don-t

Life, Anchalee Kongrut, Published on 24/07/2013

» The farming village of Sa-iab in Phrae province has been known for its staunch anti-dam protests. A visit to the village gives one a sense of entering a quasi-autonomous area. At the entrance, strangers are regularly asked to present their identity cards and sometimes questioned, but the obvious sign is a banner warning that officials and those who support the Kaeng Sua Ten Dam _ now the Northern Yom Dam and Lower Yom Dam _ are not allowed to enter the community.

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LIFE

Massive tornado hitting Oklahoma City (updated)

Terry Fredrickson, Published on 01/06/2013

» Daylight has come to Oklahoma City and while flooding and wind damage are widespread, it is nowhere near as bad as the tornado that hit the area on May 20. It now appears that the worst hit area was 800km away near St Louis Missouri. Updates continue.