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Ho
Chi Minh City residents devise ways to combat deluge
Inside an
inundated home in Binh Thanh District, Ho Chi Minh City
Tuoi Tre
Residents in Ho Chi Minh City have
come up with ways to battle the chronic curse of inundation associated with
downpours and high tides.
Inhabitants of the country’s economic hub have jokingly
dubbed flood-hit occasions a ‘floating season,’ during which paddy fields in
the Mekong Delta are submerged by water.
The season, characterized by inundation and high tides,
has inflicted untold suffering on people in many affected areas.
At the onset of a downpour, Tran Van Minh, 87, who
resides on Nguyen Quy Yem Street in Binh Tan District, tasks his children
with moving their furnishings and valuables to their mezzanine, keeping a
close eye on his young grandson and putting the two leashed dogs on a table.
Well accustomed to knee-deep floodwater following downpours, it takes his children only half an hour to brace for the coming deluge.
Like many others, Minh’s family is victimized by an
‘endless race’ between road agencies – tasked with repeatedly increasing the
elevation of the streets and alleys – and individuals who have to raise the
foundation of their houses accordingly.
Three men in a Ho Chi Minh City
district enjoy their “hu tieu” (rice noodles served with meat and broth) on
stools amidst surging floodwater. Photo: Tuoi Tre
After a street in front of his home was elevated last
year, meaning it is currently 0.5 meters higher than his foundation, his
house and those surrounding are frequently flooded.
To prepare for this year’s rainy season, which
typically begins around July each year and ends in October or November, his
son has bought bricks and cement and plans to erect a partition, meant to
impede the flow of water.
Loan, Minh’s daughter-in-law, and his grandson began to
operate a drainage pump to force the surging liquid out.
“Our pump works all day during torrential rains. In
serious cases, we even borrow another pump from our neighbors,” Loan
revealed.
Minh usually sleeps downstairs, but during the
‘floating season,’ he and his children and grandchildren share a 10m²
mezzanine at night.
He points to a marker on the wall, explaining that his
foundation should be elevated to that height if his house is to be
flood-free.
“If so, we could sit instead of standing inside our ‘bunker,’”
he said.
Loan places small stools in deeply-inundated areas and
walks on them with the finesse of an acrobat to get around their house.
In case of night downpours, the octogenarian does not
sleep until 10:00 pm, while his two children take turns to watch over the
pump.
Many residents in areas prone to constant high
tide-related inundation have long resorted to ‘evacuating’ their furnishings
and electrical appliances elsewhere to ensure they remain in working order
and do not trigger electric shocks.
Drainage pumps are instrumental in
city dwellers’ fight against flooding. Photo: Tuoi Tre
Nam, a resident on Nguyen Huu Canh Street in Binh Thanh
District, has hung most of her utensils and fittings in shelves or walls,
whose bases have turned mossy due to the constant exposure to floodwater over
the years.
Sacks of sand have also been instrumental in
households’ fight against flooding.
Compact sacks, weighing around 10 kilograms each, form
‘dykes’ to cushion houses from the deluge.
On an afternoon last month, Ap Chien Luoc Street in
Binh Tan District, another of the city’s flood hotspots, looked as forlorn as
a hamlet in the Mekong Delta – a region highly vulnerable to flood.
A young mother was feeding her toddler who was
delighted at the sight of floodwater.
Le Thi Thao Trang, 36, revealed that her family
arranges their belongings compactly so that they can be quickly moved upstairs
when floodwater surges, even when it is not raining.
Her father is entrusted with updating his family on
weather forecasts to allow them enough time to get ready.
The area near a canal on Phan Anh Street in Tan Phu
District often gets deluged, making it hard to tell the canal from the alley.
Residents there erect marking poles to keep people from
tripping.
Inhabitants on An Duong Vuong Street in District 8
lament that in times of sudden downpours, they scurry into the streets in
panic or take shelter in houses with higher foundations.
Nguyen Thi Lan, 25, in Binh Tan, and her parents often
spend their night in relatives’ homes or at hotels, as their rented home gets
inundated following torrential rains.
Meanwhile, households in Thanh Uy Residential Area in
the outlying district of Thu Duc ingeniously have two valves, measuring one
meter and 60 centimeters each, attached to their sewage pipes, in a bid to
stall high tides.
Residents have also raised funds to build a long, tall
dyke to impede the tides.
Those who cannot
afford drainage pumps resort to other utensils to scoop floodwater out from
their homes. Photo:
Tuoi Tre
Several have also adopted folk measures long practiced
by Mekong Delta farmers such as reinforcing land against erosion by placing
stakes along canals.
Just like their suburban counterparts, inner districts
are not immune to flooding either.
Le Van Dung, who lives on Nguyen Xi Street in Binh
Thanh District, said that he sadly lost his much-loved dog flushed away by
floodwater.
Dwellers in Thanh Da residential area in the same
district do not fare any better.
Meteorological forecasting agencies have predicted that
more deluges will occur by the end of this year, meaning city dwellers’
relentless ordeal is likely far from over.
Tuoi Tre News
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Chủ Nhật, 8 tháng 11, 2015
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