Thailand: Cats and elephants threatened by monsoon flood

By Deutsche Welle (Asia) | Created at 2024-10-04 20:43:04 | Updated at 2024-10-04 23:28:30 3 hours ago
Truth

Flooding in northern Thailand forced many residents of the temple city of Chiang Mai and its outskirts to seek safety outside their homes on Friday, with animals living nearby also forced to seek higher ground as heavy monsoon rains battered the region.

The world-famous tourist destination has 115,000 residents and is the largest city in northern Thailand. Local authorities said the Ping River, which flows through the city, had reached an all-time high.

Evacuations had begun at the Elephant Nature Park, which is home to some 3,000 rescued animals, among them 125 elephants, 800 dogs, 2,500 cats, 200 rabbits and 200 cows.

The latest floods, fueled by monsoon rains, come just weeks after Typhoon Yagi flooded entire city neighborhoods in Thailand.

Dozens of elephants reported to be missing

Footage posted online showed several animals in the Elephant Nature Park fleeing through rising, muddy water.

Elephants wade through the water in their enclosure at Chiang Mai-based Elephant Nature ParkRescuers and staff are racing to help save animals from being swept away by the delugeImage: Thapanee Eadsrichai/REUTERS

Several animals, including a buffalo, had been swept away by the deluge, according to local media. The Khaosod newspaper quoted the founder of the Friends of Asian Elephants foundation as saying that at least one elephant had already drowned while 30 more were still missing.

Deputy Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai, however, declared that 117 elephants had been rescued and many smaller animals, including cats and dogs, had also been brought to safety.

The Thai capital of Bangkok is located just above the sea level and has suffered greatly from climate change in recent years, with the metropolitan region of around 15 million inhabitants being threatened by heavy rainfall and flooding.

jsi/dj (AP, dpa)

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