Authorities in HCM City have
outlined stronger flood-prevention measures as heavy rains and high tides
continue to cause severe flooding.
In District 6, Binh Thanh, Binh Tan and Hoc Mon districts, for
example, many streets are seriously flooded after heavy rains, despite the
city's efforts in recent years to deal with the problem.
Speaking on the Listen and Discuss talk show on HCM City Television
last week, Doan Thanh Xuan, who lives in Hoc Mon's Trung Chanh Commune, said
flooding still occurred in the rainy season, especially on Song Hanh, Nguyen
Anh Thu and To Ky streets.
"When there are heavy rains, the streets are flooded 40-50
cm deep in water and the floods last for three to four hours, causing water
to flow into houses," he said.
Nguyen Hoang Anh Dung, deputy director of the Centre of the
Urban Flood Control Programme, said the centre had also built many sluice
gates to control high tides in order to prevent flooding of inner districts
and some outlying districts.
However, rubbish that flows into the valves of the sluice gates
sometimes gets stuck, and the valve cannot close, thus allowing water from
high tides to flow inland and cause flooding.
In the 1998-2006 period, the city also used more than 12,600ha
of farmland, lakes and canals for construction sites, reducing the amount of
land that functions as draining areas for rain and water from high tides,
according to the city's Department of Transport's Water Drainage and Supply
Division.
The city had only implemented 40 per cent of the city's drainage
zoning plan, he said.
Tran Trong Tuan, director of the city's Department of Transport,
said of the city's 5,000km of rivers and canals, only 1,077 km had been used
to drain water, and the rest had been used for irrigation and transport.
"Illegal encroachment on rivers and canals has contributed
to the city's flooding as it has narrowed the flow of water," he said.
The city has more than 20,000 houses built on or along canals.
Many households along canals throw rubbish into canals, blocking water flow
and causing pollution.
Nguyen Minh Giam, deputy director of the Southern Centre for
Hydro -Meteorology Forecast, said climate change was also a cause of flooding.
A heavy rain on September 15 overloaded the drainage system,
causing severe flooding.
Dung, deputy director of the Centre of the Urban Flood Control
Programme, said the city would build 200 km of sluice gates within the next
five years to solve flooding.
During this period, the city will also build nine large sluice
gates on the Sai Gon River in Binh Thanh, 4, 1, 7, Binh Chanh and Nha Be
districts to control high tides.
Rivers and canals will be dredged and water reservoirs built to
reduce flooding, according to the city's Department of Transport.
As of May, 68 sites in the city had been affected by floods.
Vo Van Kiet Boulevard to be raised by 20-40 cm
HCM CITY — The Sai Gon River Tunnel Management Centre has
submitted a proposal to the city's Department of Transport to upgrade Vo Van
Kiet Boulevard's 550-metre section from Ho Ngoc Lam Street to Pedestrian
Bridge Nxo. 2.
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Thứ Hai, 16 tháng 11, 2015
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