Questions raised following deadly Laos dam collapse
SANAMXAY, Laos — Authorities in Laos ordered closer monitoring of hydroelectric facilities as they investigate why a dam in the country’s southeast collapsed earlier this week, killing at least 27 people and leaving 131 missing.
Floodwaters that rose to rooftops were slowly receding Thursday as evacuees trickled back to villages inundated with mud.
Farmer Kongvilay and his wife Thongla Inthavong returned after spending two nights at a shelter to find their wooden stilt house had been washed 50 metres (160 feet) away into their rice field. The family left the house in a rush as the water level climbed to 2 metres (6 1/2 feet) in just one hour after the dam broke late Monday.
“I’m worried the same accident might happen again,” Thongla said as she and her husband scraped mud off their belongings. “But we can’t live anywhere else. We’ve been here our entire lives.”


