Rescue workers reinforced make-shift walls and sand-bags around Bangkok today as the worst floods in half-a-century threatened Thailand's low-lying capital after swamping entire provinces in the north.
Thai prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra sought to reassure Bangkok's 12 million people they would largely escape floods that have swept over a third of Thailand since July, killing at least 297 people, causing about $3 billion in damage and turning villages and industrial parks into lakes.
The north, northeast and centre of Thailand have been worst hit and Bangkok - much of it only two metres above sea level - is at risk as water overflows from reservoirs in the north, swelling the Chao Phraya river that winds through the densely populated city.
Ms Yingluck said in a national address that Bangkok is well fortified after authorities raised embankments at the three outer areas.
She added that water released from several dams should reduce the chance of floods as a wall of northern run-off water makes its way to Bangkok over the weekend, coinciding with high estuary tides that hamper the river's flow into the sea.
"We will protect strategic areas and the heart of the economy such as industrial zones, the central part of all provinces and Thai capital as well as Suvarnabhumi Airport, industrial estates and evacuation centres," she said, referring to Bangkok's main international airport.
Despite official assurances, residents are stocking up on bottled water and foodstuffs such as instant noodles and canned soup. Many have parked their cars in elevated garages, and piled sand-bags in front of shop-houses and homes.
"If we're not prepared for the floods, it is hard to imagine what will happen if the government cannot help us in time," said Sompong Pinmaninsab, a bank worker in Ta Prachan, a Bangkok district known for its markets next to the Chao Phraya river.
"Anything can happen."
The United States dispatched a C-130 military transport aircraft with 1,000 sand-bags and 10 US marines in a humanitarian mission, US embassy spokesman Walter Braunohler said in a statement.
Twenty-five of Thailand's 77 provinces are flooded with 4 million acres of farmland under water - about 16 times the size of Hong Kong. Nearly 800,000 homes have been destroyed or damaged. Thousands of people huddled in evacuation centres.
Ayutthaya, Pathum Thani and Nakhon Sawan provinces north of Bangkok have been devastated. Floods have swallowed up homes, swamped streets and destroyed industrial parks, partly a result of desperate measures to shield the capital.
To protect the Bangkok, authorities have reinforced its last defences - a 4 km flood barrier along a canal and a sluice gate in Pathum Thani province north of the city, where offices, shops and restaurants have been submerged in chest-high water and many residents now get around in boats.
Bangkok, known for historic temples, bustling markets and raucous nightlife, is on edge amid bickering between the government and the city's governor. The two are on either side of a political divide that sparked violent protests last year.
Bangkok is the business heart of Thailand, accounting for 41 per cent of its economy. In comparison, the central region, which has been badly flooded, accounts for 8 per cent of the economy, Southeast Asia's second-largest.
Parts of the central province of Ayutthaya, home to an ancient Siamese capital founded in the 14th century, are nearly completely submerged, forcing at least three big industrial estates to shut temporarily. Several spectacular monuments and temples have been flooded for days.
Thai media said floods had almost completely isolated Samkok, a district in Pathum Thani province, making it inaccessible by car and stranding locals.
Reuters