Many residents had to move to higher grounds as some areas were under 2 feet of water.
On October 23 Street, a key road connecting downtown Nha Trang with Dien Khanh District and National Highway 1A, traffic police had to put up warning signs as most vehicles attempting to pass through would find their wheels completely underwater. “This morning I went to deliver goods to a client in Cam Lam District. The road was still normal back then but when I go back in the afternoon it’s already flooded. My car managed to drive for a short distance but then the engine died,” driver Nguyen Van Phuong said.
Some locals had to travel around by boat.
After seeing many motorbike engines die from flood water, Nguyen Van Chien decided to block his motorbike’s exhaust pipe. “This way water won’t be able to get in. I just need to walk it through the flooded section then I can ride it as normal,” he said.
Thuy, 34, was picking her son up from school when her motorbike’s engine died. Unable to walk the motorbike all the way home with her son on it, she eventually had to let the boy wade through the flood water on foot.
Many people hired freight tuk tuks to transport their motorbikes through flooded areas for VND50,000 ($2.2).
With the sidewalk flooded, customers at this noodle stall had to eat while standing or sitting in uncomfortable positions. “I already cooked a lot of fish noodle in the morning so I’m trying to sell them all to break even,” the vendor said.
Since his rented house in Vinh Hiep Commune had been flooded, this foreign man had to pack up and move to a higher area.
Khanh Hoa Provincial Steering Committee for Natural Disaster Prevention and Control, Search and Rescue said reservoirs in the province have been filling up after days of heavy rain, forcing some to discharge water. Cai River’s water level is therefore expected to reach level 3, the highest level of emergency.
Heavy rain also caused a landslide on Cu Hin Pass, according to Ngo Khac Thinh, deputy head of Nha Trang’s Urban Management Division. Traffic between Nha Trang and Cam Ranh Airport has therefore been jammed.
Another landslide also occured on National Highway 27C connecting Nha Trang and the Central Highlands’ resort town of Da Lat. Noone was injured by the landslides.
Khanh Hoa Province was among the hardest hit by Typhoon Damrey last month, which killed 45 people, destroyed 3,000 houses, damaged 12,000 houses and destroyed thousands of fish farms in the province. Local statistics estimated that the typhoon had caused nearly VND15 trillion ($661.5 million) in damages to the province.
Source: Xuan Ngoc