People make their way through a flooded area near the Sam Wa flood gate, which local residents damaged to let floodwaters flow out of their area toward the city centre in Bangkok yesterday

Authorities in the Thai capital repaired a damaged flood gate yesterday that has become the focus of anger, fear and rivalry between arms of government battling the country’s worst floods in decades.
The central government led by Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, sister of the ousted populist premier Thaksin Shinawatra, is at odds with the city government dominated by the main opposition and former ruling Democrat party.
The floods that have killed 427 people since July are the first big test for Yingluck, who came to power in a July poll many Thais hoped would heal divisions that last year brought violent clashes in Southeast Asia’s second biggest economy.
Inner Bangkok, protected by a network of dikes and sandbag walls, survived peak tides at the weekend and is mostly dry.
But huge amounts of water are bottled up to the north, west and east of the city, and new areas are being flooded daily as the water tries to find its way out to sea to the south.
Anger is seething in flooded communities on the wrong side of inner Bangkok’s flood barricades. Residents of the northeastern Bangkok suburb of Sam Wa took matters into their own hands this week and hacked away at the side of a canal flood gate, aiming to let the water flow out of their area towards the city centre. Yingluck ordered the gate opened in the face of the residents’ demands. The Bangkok government objected on the grounds that the flow could endanger the city centre.
But the city had to comply with Yingluck’s order to open the gate by a metre (three feet), leading to fear among inner city residents that the disaster they thought they had dodged was looming again. Yesterday, city officials and workers went to the Sam Wa flood gate to repair the damage and limit the amount of water flowing through.
“We are here doing the repair work and the police are protecting us,” said city administration spokesman Jate Sopitpongstorn.
“They have to accept it,” he said of the neighbourhood’s residents. Several hundred policemen were on hand and there were no protests.
City governor Sukhumbhand Paribatra, watching workmen with heavy machinery fix the gate, played down the political clash and said everyone had to co-operate. But, referring to the central government’s change of heart and order to open the gate, he said everyone should stick to decisions. The floods began in July, at the beginning of a particularly heavy rainy season.
Economic growth has been hit and investor confidence shaken as the water swamped industrial estates in the central Chao Phraya river basin, disrupting global supply lines for auto and computer parts.
Water is also approaching central Bangkok from the northern Don Muang district, where the city’s domestic airport has been flooded and where one resident said the water had risen 5 cm in his house yesterday.
City deputy governor Theerachon Manomaipaiboon said workers were building a wall of giant sandbags to try to stop the flow towards the city centre from the north. The wall is expected to be finished in three days but the flood is difficult to predict as it makes its way through the city’s suburbs and a poorly maintained and often partly built-over network of canals and tunnels.
“We have a very complicated system. Water in one area can appear 20 km  away,” Theerachon said.
Bangkok’s 12mn people account for 41% of Thailand’s gross domestic product and neither the central government nor the city administration wants to be seen to be responsible for an inner city deluge.
Both sides will claim victory if the centre can be saved.
But misery in outlying areas, especially north and west
Bangkok, and provinces to the north will take the gloss off any success in the inner city, especially given a perception those areas have been sacrificed to save the well-to-do city-centre.
Thonburi, on the west bank of the Chao Phraya, opposite central Bangkok’s glittering Grand Palace and Chinatown, is mostly swamped with water chest-deep in places. It could be flooded for weeks, experts say. Reuters