Bangkok
(AFP) -- Torrential rain and flooding across southern Thailand have killed at
least six people, delayed flights and disrupted holidays during peak tourist
season, officials said Friday.
Nine
provinces in Thailand's south have been beset by monsoon rains for nearly a
week, the Interior Ministry said in a statement.
Six people
have been killed and at least 120,000 households have been affected, it added.
The deluge
has turned roads into rivers, upended stretches of rail track and delayed
flights, including on the island of Samui -- a popular tourist destination.
Photos
circulated on social media showed cars nearly submerged in muddy waters, with
some foreign tourists bobbing along in inflatable tubes to the amusement of
onlookers.
Tuula
Fitzpatrick, the owner of a guesthouse on Samui, said the flooding was the
worst to hit the island in over a decade.
"In
our guesthouse there were lots of people whose flights were cancelled,"
she told AFP.
"I've
been living here for 12 years and I've never seen it so bad... It was scary.
Some of my staff couldnt come to work."
Rail
services have also been disrupted on the mainland, with trains unable to pass
through the flooded region, authorities said Friday.
"The
flood waters have hit the tracks and in some places the track was washed
away," said Thanongsak Kongprasert, deputy governor of the State Railway
of Thailand.
Junta chief
Prayut Chan-O-Cha is scheduled to visit the southernmost province of Narathiwat
on Friday to meet with flood victims and officials.
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