City
Epaper

Laos ramps up disaster relief, preparedness efforts

By IANS | Updated: July 26, 2025 18:04 IST

Vientiane, July 26 The Laos government is actively working on disaster relief efforts to assist victims of natural ...

Open in App

Vientiane, July 26 The Laos government is actively working on disaster relief efforts to assist victims of natural disasters this year, and is strengthening measures to prepare for future emergencies.

A consultation meeting on disaster relief planning for provinces affected in 2025 was held on Friday in Lao capital Vientiane, chaired by Lao Deputy Prime Minister Chansamone Chanyalath, according to a Lao People's Army News report on Saturday.

During the meeting, Vongkham Phanthanouvong, Director General of Social Welfare Department under the Laos Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare, presented a report on the impact of Typhoon Wipha, the sixth typhoon of the year. It brought widespread rain and thunderstorms, causing flooding in eight provinces including Vientiane, Bolikhamxay, Luang Prabang, Xayaboury, Xieng Khuang, Huaphan, Bokeo, and Xaysomboun.

According to initial assessments, flooding and landslides impacted 262 villages across 34 districts, affecting 14,974 families and 14,191 people. Four people were killed, six others were injured, and four people remain missing in the catastrophe.

The disaster damaged 2,249 houses, 1,753 hectares of agricultural land, 11 power grids, five schools, 47 roads, five bridges, two irrigation facilities, and 17 sanitation facilities.

In response, the Central Disaster Management Committee instructed local authorities to closely monitor the situation and strengthen preparedness for potential future disasters.

Provincial and district command centres have been established to coordinate relief operations. Emergency aid has been distributed to affected families, while rescue teams assisted stranded individuals and recovered the deceased. Efforts have also been made to repair damaged roads and restore transportation, Xinhua news agency reported.

Chansamone called on all sectors of society to join forces in supporting affected communities and helping restore normalcy as quickly as possible.

Laos residents remain on alert as river levels continue to rise, with some waterways reaching warning and danger thresholds, prompting heightened vigilance and preparations for potential flash floods.

Continuous rainfall across Laos caused river levels to rise, with the water level of the Mekong River section in Lao capital Vientiane reaching 12.51 metres on Friday, just above the danger level of 12.50 metres, according to the Department of Meteorology and Hydrology under the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUS launches Operation Hawkeye in Syria post killing of 2 soldiers

InternationalPresident made it a priority to be a peacemaker: US State Secy Marco Rubio claims Trump stopped Indo-Pak conflict

InternationalUS Justice Dept misses deadline to release full Epstein files, cites victim protection concerns

InternationalBangladesh unrest: Conspiracy to destabilise upcoming national election, says BNP

InternationalGlobal push for traditional medicine gains momentum after WHO summit

International Realted Stories

International"Extremely alarming": Priyanka Gandhi urges Centre to take cognisance of increasing violence against Hindus in Bangladesh

InternationalIndia shows how tradition, modern science can advance together: WHO chief Tedros at global summit on traditional medicine

InternationalUS says it is grateful as Pakistan weighs Gaza troop role

International"More than a workplace": WHO DG as South-East Asia Regional Office inaugurated in New Delhi

InternationalJaishankar meets multi-party parliamentary delegations that represented India at UNGA