UN Laos villages ravaged by dam collapse

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Well I'll be damned
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https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/asia/dead-cows-destroyed-homes-laos-dam-collapse-10565250

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HOI KONG, Laos: The bloated carcasses of pigs and cows float in the knee-high flood waters covering the Laos village of Hoi Kong, as mud-caked residents pick through the remnants of homes destroyed by a dam collapse that they had little time to flee.

Monday night's dam break inflicted an unprecedented catastrophe on Laos, a poor country with little capacity to manage remote, large-scale rescue operations.


But with the waters receding, the scale of the disaster is revealing itself.


Residents in Hoi Kong returned to their flooded homes on Thursday, wading past vehicles pushed onto their sides by rushing water, with thick red mud caking everything they once owned.

"The people are in very bad condition," a Vietnamese military doctor helping with the relief effort told AFP, requesting anonymity.

"Really I don't know how they will overcome this devastation. They have lost everything."

In crowded shelters across Attapeu province, survivors have recounted the terrifying moment water cascaded through their villages, saying they were given little warning of the impending disaster.

It was Monday evening and many of those forewarned had only been given a few hours to evacuate.

Others were told nothing, scrambling in the darkness to rooftops, trees, or escaping via boats to dry land. Many fled into the mountains seeking higher ground.

LITTLE WARNING

"No one warned us," said Poosa Duangapai from a makeshift shelter in a kindergarten where the displaced lay on mats.

"Only those who saw the water coming shouted to us. I have only one sarong, one blouse and another piece of cloth with me."

A Vietnamese man living in the area said a loudspeaker warned his Ban Mai village that water would be discharged from the dam, just two hours before it totally collapsed.


"From 9pm to 2am, the water rose very quickly. We ran to a house behind ours, the water came to the second floor, the third floor... then we were all on the roof," Tran Van Bien, 47, told AFP.

"I saw some people floating, but I couldn't do anything. Some of them survived, but some must have died."

Monday's disaster has raised serious questions about the wisdom of poor but resource-rich Laos' aim to become the "battery of Asia" with dozens of dams built or planned across the country's vast river network.

Hundreds of villages have been relocated, many repeatedly, to make way for hydropower projects whose electricity is sold to neighbouring countries.

But Laotians cannot protest, and environmental groups are barred from the construction sites - almost all of which are contracted out to foreign companies from China, Vietnam, Thailand and South Korea.

Some are now questioning whether poor design may be to blame for the accident in an area routinely drenched with monsoon rains.


The dam was an 'earth-filled' structure, made with a mixture of materials that are often less expensive than stronger concrete blocks, said Lihai Zhang, from University of Melbourne's Department of Infrastructure Engineering.

"Maybe human underestimation, plus extreme circumstances - which means heavy rain continuously for several days - putting these two things together may result in the collapse," he told AFP.

One of the Korean companies who ran the dam said it was too early to say what caused the accident, noting that rainfall last week was higher than normal.

Source: AFP
 
Look who's ready to lend a helping hand:

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/...lippines-ready-assist-laos-after-dam-collapse

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Philippines ready to assist Laos after dam collapse


MANILA, Philippines — The Philippine government expressed its willingness to assist Laos following a dam breach in the southern part of the country that left dozens of people dead and hundreds missing.

Ambassador to Vientiane Belinda Ante said that 10 out of the 28 Filipinos registered with the Philippine Embassy are in the area but are all safe and were not affected by the flooding.

“Our thoughts are with the government and people of Laos as they cope with this tragedy... We hope and pray for the safe recovery of the many who were reported missing," Foreign Affairs Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano said.

According to the Philippine Embassy in Vientiane, the Xepian-Xe Nam Noy hydropower dam collapsed on Monday night due to monsoon rains.

The dam collapse sent millions of tons of water to overflow and flood at least six villages in Attapeu province.


"Ambassador to Vientiane Belinda Ante said the Embassy is in touch with members of the Filipino Community in the affected areas in Attapeu, which is located approximately 584 kilometers southeast of the capital," the DFA said in a release.

The website of state-run Vientiane Times newspaper said that two people were confirmed dead as of Tuesday afternoon. The government declared the area a disaster zone and top officials were rushing to the site, it said.

Photos and videos posted on social media showed people sitting on rooftops to escape the surging water, while others were carried to safety or rescued by boat. State media said helicopters were also being used to rescue people.

Continued heavy rain and strong winds forecast for the area could hinder rescue efforts, and risks from flooding persisted in the mountainous region.

Provincial authorities issued a call for emergency aid—clothing, food, drinking water, medicine, cash and other items—from the "party, government organizations, business community, officials, police and military forces and people of all strata." — Patricia Lourdes Viray with Associated Press
 
But Laotians cannot protest, and environmental groups are barred from the construction sites - almost all of which are contracted out to foreign companies from China, Vietnam, Thailand and South Korea.
“Laotian”? What ocean is that?
 
Cost of Atheism, if it was a god damn it would have held.

I'll see myself out. Seriously though, damn breaking and floodings are horrible and scary as hell. I hope they can dry out and recover soon enough, those people have had the planet shit on them for 1000s of years, they will be ok.
 
One of the Korean companies who ran the dam said it was too early to say what caused the accident, noting that rainfall last week was higher than normal.
With erupting South Korean political corruption scandals, this could be huge, all while they're supposed to see North Korean peace...
 
Surprised that the villagers were allowed to give their piece considering that this is supposed to be one the most repressive countries on the planet.
 
Oh crap it's spread:

https://www.npr.org/2018/07/26/6325...failed-dam-in-laos-has-now-spread-to-cambodia

Huge Flood From Failed Dam In Laos Has Now Spread To Cambodia
July 26, 201810:01 AM ET
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Children and a woman sit on a locally made vehicle in Laos as they travel during flooding caused by the collapse of a dam in the Xe Pian-Xe Namnoy hydroelectric project in Attapeu Province.

Soe Zeya Tun/Reuters
Some 25,000 Cambodians raced to find higher ground after floodwaters spread to their province from a failed hydroelectric dam in neighboring Laos, according to state media in Cambodia. In Laos, the government says flooding has killed at least 27 peopleand destroyed the homes of more than 3,000 residents.

Cambodia's Sekong River hit a water level of nearly 12 meters (almost 40 feet) on Thursday — a height that left 17 villages flooded and forced the local government to rush to find shelter for roughly half the population of the Siem Pang district in Stung Treng province, state news agency AKP reports.

According to AKP, Cambodian water and weather spokesperson H.E. Chan Yutha "said that there was no retreating sign and the water kept increasing about two centimeters per hour."



The flooding could also threaten a nearly 900-foot bridge that was recently completed in Stung Treng, the news agency says.

The disaster started Monday night in Laos' Attapeu Province. That's where a "saddle dam" in a large hydroelectric project failed, causing panic and destruction in low-lying villages downriver. The rush of millions of gallons of water has now caused evacuations more than 40 miles away in Cambodia — and with more rain falling this week, the flooding is expected to continue as the mass of water churns through river systems.

The dam in the Xe Pian-Xe Namnoy complex was holding back water from the Xe Namnoy River, which was diverted in April 2015 as part of an ambitious multi-dam hydroelectric plan.

As NPR's Scott Neuman has reported:

"Landlocked Laos is one of Southeast Asia's poorest and most isolated countries, governed by one of the world's few remaining communist governments. In recent years the country has sought to become 'the battery of Southeast Asia' by exploiting its extensive river system to generate and sell hydroelectric power to its neighbors."

The tragedy has raised questions about whether residents were adequately warned, particularly after reports emerged that Korean firms involved in the dam project had raised an alert about a structural problem just one day before the collapse. As of Thursday, the umbrella development company has been silent.

"Xe Pian Xe Namnoy Power Company has not made any public and official statements over the incident as yet," Laos' state-run Vientiane Times reports.

But after Laotian Energy Minister Khammany Inthirath said the company cannot deny its responsibility — and that compensation and other costs are to be borne solely by the developer — an official told the newspaper that the company will follow the letter of the law and the agreements it signed.

A number of countries have stepped in to help ease the catastrophe in Laos, including Thailand, South Korea, Vietnam and China – all of which are sending equipment and personnel to try to ease the crisis.
 
"It's too early to tell why this industrial scale beaver dam we constructed from dirt, sticks, and sparkling paste failed."
--some Korean who would never build a mud dam in South Korea.
 
Sheesh. A lot of the residents can apply for refugee status and will likely get it. Back in the early 80's the Central Valley had a HUGE influx of refugees from Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam pour in. They used to joke that the second they came off the refugee boats they have them their welfare cards and a map to Central California.

That area is very water rich but agriculturally poor. The recent Damming up of a lot of rivers is going to cause even more problems then this on the long term. Treating an entire country like it exists to create cheap electricity is going to be a huge environmental problem too. They are ruining habitats, moving animals hunting grounds which will bring them ever closer to human populations, some species will even go extinct. They aren't paying attention to it tho. "Cheap electricity that WE arent going to pay for" is the main battle cry of these guys. THEY aren't going to have to live with the problems they will be causing.
 
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