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Latest flood map at Bangkok, its serious.....

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A woman pulls an inflatable raft carrying a child through floodwaters in Bangkok on November 9, 2011.

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People wait for transportation amid floodwaters in Bangkok on November 9, 2011.​
 
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Thai workers grab a giant sand bag creating a wall to protect the Bangchan Industrial Estate as waters rise on the outskirts of the capitol city November 8, 2011 in Bangkok, Thailand.​
 
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Local residents travel on the back of trucks through the flooded Mo Chit area in Bangkok on November 9, 2011​
 
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People walk through floodwaters past a closed Isuzu dealership in Bangkok on November 9, 2011.​
 
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A woman sits on a fridge outside a closed restaurant while surrounded by floodwaters in Bangkok on November 9, 2011.​
 

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People use small boats to move in a flooded area in Bangkok's suburbs November 9, 2011

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A police officer walks through floodwaters in Bangkok on November 9, 2011. Thailand plans to hire at least 2,000 extra rubbish collectors in the capital Bangkok to tackle a mountain of trash that has piled up in inundated areas, officials said on November 9.​
 
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A man uses stilts to walk through floodwaters in Bangkok on November 9, 2011​
 
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An airforce official surveys a flooded military airport, next to Don Muang airport, in Bangkok November 9, 2011​
 
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Women carry toddlers as they walk through floodwaters in Bangkok on November 9, 2011.​
 
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A girl reacts as she gets hit with a wave of flood water while walking with her family in Bangkok November 9, 2011

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Thai flood victims jostle as soldiers distribute food packets from a military truck at a flooded neighborhood in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2011​
 
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A Thai man prepares rice for flood victims under an overhead bridge used as a makeshift relief center in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2011. The flooding began in late July and the water has reached parts of Bangkok, where residents are frustrated by government confusion over how much worse the flooding will get.

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A Thai man expresses gratitude as a soldier extends a food packet to him at a flooded neighborhood in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2011

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A Thai boy runs towards a military truck distributing food packets at a flooded neighborhood in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2011​
 
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A man carries a woman on his back through floodwaters in Bangkok on November 9, 2011​
 
11/9/2011
BANGKOK — Every year when the moon is full and the rainy season draws to an end, Thailand's waterways fill with millions of floating lotus-shaped lanterns — a symbolic, centuries-old gesture once meant to placate to the country's goddess of water.
Today, many Thais still believe the candlelit boats launched during Loy Krathong can carry misfortune away with them, allowing past sins to be cleansed and life to begin anew.
This year, flood-ravaged Thailand has plenty of reason to pray for rebirth — and little reason to celebrate.
The festival, due Thursday, comes on the heels of a cataclysmic waterborne disaster that's drowned one-third of the country in three months, killing 529 people and wiping out rice fields and factories and livelihoods along the way. The flooding is the worst in Thailand since World War II, and it's not over yet. Damage so far is likely to exceed $6 billion. Recovery will take months.
"Most people don't feel like celebrating this year — there's been too much sadness and suffering," said Saithong Sateankamsoragai, a Bangkok flower vendor who sells the tiny boats, called krathongs, that are an integral part of the annual festival.
Saithong fled her own home late last month after chest-level water engulfed it. Now she lives with her sister in a drier part of the capital, a refugee forced to flee by the water this Southeast Asian kingdom is ironically paying tribute to.
Tragedy in mind, the Tourism Authority of Thailand has canceled all official celebrations in Bangkok, including those along the Chao Phraya river — the chocolate-colored waterway that snakes through the city of glittering condominiums and decrepit apartment blocks. In recent weeks, the river's banks have brimmed to record levels, forcing a halt to dinner cruises and fueling fears the mighty waterway could swamp downtown.
Outside the capital, in cities floodwaters have spared, festivities are going ahead. They include the northern town of Sukhothai, where the tradition is believed to have been born. Revelers there have already begun setting off fireworks this week, filling the skies with the spellbinding spectacle of balloon-like lanterns.
The mood in Bangkok, where many neighborhoods remain submerged, is far more subdued. The Culture Ministry is calling for revelers to float just one boat per family, or float them online through websites on which you can light digital candles and incense and watch yours float on a full-screen rendering of lake.

The Bangkok Metropolitan Authority, meanwhile, is urging people in flooded zones not to launch any at all.
Close to a million krathongs are typically set adrift annually in the capital alone, and there is concern they could trigger fires in abandoned homes or clog drains and canals critical to helping ease the massive pools of runoff bearing down on the metropolis of 9 million people.
Most krathongs are made from hardened, painted bread or ornately curled banana leafs filled with yellow marigold flowers and metallic-purple globe thistles. Some are built from environmentally unfriendly non-biodegradable plastic foam.
Thais joke they won't have to go far from home to find water this year. "We probably can float the krathongs right in the house," tweeted one.
Bangkok authorities have designated a dozen parks where krathongs can safely be launched.
"Of course it's different than it has been in years' past," said Ladda Thangsupachai, a senior Culture Ministry official. "Can there be fun while there is suffering?"
Loy Krathong has its roots in a long ago era when most Thais lived in stilt houses made of wood, dependent on rivers and rain-fed agricultural land for their sustenance and survival.
That life is slowly being erased by mass urban development, which critics say has exacerbated the current crisis. Over the last few decades, canals that once allowed annual floodwaters to pass through the capital unheeded have been paved over to make room for roads, highways, shopping malls and housing estates.

"Most people in Bangkok have lost their connection to water, it doesn't exist like it did in the past," said Siripan Nogsuan Sawasdee, Associate Professor of Political Science at Chulalongkorn University.
Loy Krathong, meanwhile, has morphed into a romantic evening for hand-holding lovers, a relaxing night for families and friends, a commercialized holiday in which beauty contests are held.
Thanking the water goddess — Phra Mae Khongkha — or asking her forgiveness for polluting the nation's life-sustaining rivers, "isn't on people's minds" any longer, Siripan said. "Most people don't believe in that anymore."
Still, as floodwaters approached Bangkok in early October, the city's governor held a special ceremony to pay tribute to the water goddess and beg for the crisis' swift end.



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A Thai woman arranges floats made for the Loy Krathong festival at a flower market in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2011. Every year when the moon is full and the rainy season draws to an end, millions of Thais fill their country's waterways with miniature lotus-shaped boats, setting them adrift with flickering candles in a centuries-old homage to a water goddess. This year, flood-ravaged Thailand has plenty of reason to pray for rebirth, and little reason to celebrate​
 
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A Thai vendor arranges floats made for the Loy Krathong festival at a flower market in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2011​
 
now they Can just loy krathong in front of their streets, no need to go to the river. How convenient!!!!

I see loy krathong as a way to pollute the rivers and sea. They have no control of the stuffs that they 'throw' to the sea and river. Now the sea and rivers are angry and they 'confront' them..
 
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An aerial view shows flooded areas in Bangkok on November 10, 2011

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An aerial view shows flood water approaching the centre of Bangkok on November 10, 2011. The Thai capital, built on swampland, is slowly sinking and the floods currently besieging Bangkok could be merely a foretaste of a grim future as climate change makes its impact felt, experts say.​
 
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Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, center, talks with reporters from a public bus before paying a visit to flood victims in Bangkok, Thailand, Thursday, Nov. 10, 2011​
 
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Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, right, is greeted by supporters upon her arrival to preside over the release of relief caravan for flood victims in Bangkok, Thailand, Thursday, Nov. 10, 2011. Thailand's former Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva added to growing criticism of his successor, Yingluck, over her administration's flood response, saying Wednesday that the government should postpone some promised populist measures to free up money for flood recovery.

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Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, right, greets a Thai flood victim at a relief center in Bangkok, Thailand, Thursday, Nov. 10, 2011​
 
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Thai residents come down from a passenger bus along a flooded street in Bangkok, Thailand, Thursday, Nov. 10, 2011

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Thai commuters walk along a makeshift walkway to keep them dry from floodwaters in Bangkok, Thailand, Thursday, Nov. 10, 2011.​
 
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