Storm Pabuk: Tourists flee Thailand after weather warnings
Thousands of tourists and residents
have reportedly fled islands off Thailand’s south-east coast to escape
an approaching tropical storm.
Authorities have also been preparing shelters for those deciding to stay put.
Thailand’s
Met Office says Tropical Storm Pabuk will bring strong winds and 7
metre (22 ft) waves but it is unlikely to become a typhoon.
A weather warning has been issued but no evacuation order is in place.
The storm is expected hit the country’s southern coast from Thursday, causing heavy rainfall and possible flash flooding.
Thailand’s Defence Minister Prawit Wongsuwan said the military was on alert to assist people affected.
Among those areas in the path of the storm is Surat Thani, home to the popular tourist islands of Koh Phangnan, Koh Samui and Koh Tao.
Visitor numbers to the islands usually peak over the Christmas and New Year period.
“I think the islands are almost empty,” Krikkrai Songthanee, Koh Phangnan’s district chief, told AFP.
Images are circulating on social media of tourists and residents leaving various islands by boat for the Thai mainland.
However,
bans on boats have been enforced in several areas including Phi Phi
Island because of safety concerns. As a result, many tourists have been
forced to stay put.
Swimming has also been banned in Koh Samui. But videos on social media showing people swimming in the island.
Bangkok Airways said it had cancelled some flights, whilst other airlines said they were monitoring the weather.
Authorities on some islands are have avoided enforcing bans or advising evacuations altogether.
Chaiyan
Thurasakul, mayor of the Koh Tao Subdistrict Municipality, told BBC
Thai the island had prepared for risks of floods, landslides and strong
waves.
“If the storm is severe for two to three days, we may have
to ask for help from the main land for shipment of necessary items,”
said Chaiyan.
Pabuk – which means giant catfish in Lao – is the
first storm in nearly thirty years to hit the region outside monsoon
season, which ends around November.
In 2011, devastating floods in Thailand killed 600 people and displaced thousands of others in more than a third of the country’s provinces.
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