できるなら↓こっちに住みたい
アタペュの仮設住宅建設
アタプー省サナセイ地区:7月23日に洪水によりホームレスになった人々を収容するために、当局が臨時住宅の建設を加速している。
建設は2週間前に仕事が始まってから45日を要すると予想されています。
Vithaya Phommachanh省エネルギー鉱業部長は昨日の記者会見で、「当局は洪水の被害者を収容するために住宅の建設をスピードアップしている」と語った。
Construction of temporary houses underway in Attapeu
Sanamxay district, Attapeu province: Authorities in charge are speeding up the construction of temporary houses to accommodate those made homeless by the flood that raged through here on July 23. Construction is expect to take 45 days after work began two weeks ago. “Authorities are speeding up construction of the houses to accommodate the flood victims,” Director of the province’s Energy and Mines Department, Mr Vithaya Phommachanh, said at a press conference yesterday.
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“There will be 14 temporary houses with 10 rooms each, and each room can accommodate three to four people.” Toilets are also being built. “We are building the houses at Hadyao Primary School and in Dongbak, Hadyao, Donbok, Hindong and Tamoryord villages,” he added. Hadyao village is one kilometre from the centre of the district. Mr Vithaya said “In the future, we plan to build permanent houses in Tamoryord, Hindong, Nonthasengchanh and Dongbak villages as well as the necessary infrastructure.” The number of people who will require accommodation in the temporary houses is unclear at this stage because the figures have fluctuated after some people returned home when the floodwater receded. Over 7,000 people are currently living in 439 temporary camps in Sanamxay district. Large numbers of people are still in need of rice and other food, along with drinking water, cooking equipment, and other essential items. One homeless villager living in one of the camps, Mr Thongkhey, 49, from Khokkong village, said “My family still needs food, cooking equipment and other basics but we have received some clothing and blankets. I’ve been here for seven days since we left our village. When the flood hit, my family and a lot of other people ran to the top of a hill and stayed there for three days but we had no food or water.” “When the floodwaters receded we went back to the village and then came to the camp here because the village is uninhabitable at present,” he added. Mrs Kong, 55, who is also staying in a camp, said “We too need food and cooking equipment because what we have just isn’t enough.” As of yesterday, the death toll from the flood caused by the collapse of an auxiliary dam at the Xe-Pian Xe-Namnoy hydropower project had climbed to 35, including three injured people who died in hospital. Some 99 people are still missing. |
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