The Prime Minister’s Office got an awkward dose of live journalism yesterday, November 27, when Paradon Prissanananthakul — the minister who also leads the Emergency Flood Crisis Operations Centre — abruptly ended a press briefing after declining to answer a pointed question about whether sluggish government response had worsened losses from the devastating southern floods.
Paradon had been giving the expected updates from Hat Yai district, Songkhla, where floodwaters have wreaked havoc on homes, businesses and the daily lives of thousands. In a sympathetic note, he announced that the Ministry of Higher Education has postponed university exams nationwide — a recognition that many students are grappling with anxiety and family crises caused by the disaster.
He also outlined the logistics of the nationwide relief effort. A central donation hub has been set up at the Royal Thai Air Force Museum in Don Mueang, and donated goods will be ferried south on Lockheed C-130 Hercules aircraft. Practicalities matter: as waters begin to recede, large swathes of communities will need nothing glamorous — just the kind of elbow-greasing tools that mop up messes. Paradon specifically mentioned coconut brooms among the items in demand.
On the grimmer side, Paradon said Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul has ordered hospitals to speed up identification of victims and told the Public Health Ministry to expand storage capacity so bodies do not deteriorate further while families wait for confirmation. Those comments underscore the human toll behind the headlines — a toll that, for many, is painfully immediate.
Then came the microphone moment. A reporter asked, “Should the government admit that slow management caused this loss?” Paradon looked at the journalist, closed his microphone, thanked the media and walked out of the room without answering. The exchange — succinct, awkward and caught on camera — only added fuel to an already heated public conversation about how the crisis has been managed.
This was not an isolated flare-up. Siripong Angkasakulkiat, the centre’s spokesperson, insisted on November 26 that delays were not down to mismanagement and argued that evacuation warnings were issued in good time — even if some residents chose not to leave. Prime Minister Anutin has offered similar rebuttals; on November 25 he publicly maintained that the government mobilised resources immediately.
But official reassurances have done little to quiet public anger and grief. During a visit to a shelter at Prince of Songkhla University, a flood victim publicly confronted Prime Minister Anutin about delayed rescues. Video footage shared by ThaiRath shows her speaking while he nodded and then walked away, a moment that resonated widely on social media and in local commentary.
Numbers remain a source of contention. ThaiRath reported that 113 bodies have been found in Hat Yai since waters started to fall back. The Emergency Flood Crisis Operations Centre has not officially confirmed that figure; its last verified death toll was 55. Such discrepancies are common in fast-moving disasters, but they also magnify frustration for families and observers demanding clarity.
The economic fallout is staggering as well. Kasikorn Research Centre told MGR Online the Hat Yai flooding has caused around 25 billion baht in damage — roughly 1 billion baht per day at one point. The SEA Games host venue had to be relocated; 715 industrial factories were affected, with estimated losses of 1.282 billion baht. Songkhla’s tourism sector alone is expected to lose at least 5 billion baht, and analysts forecast Malaysian tourist arrivals could dip by 7–18%.
That constellation of human suffering and economic shock explains why tensions are high and why officials rapidly pivot between damage control and logistical triage. Setting up a central donation hub and flying in supplies is one thing; ensuring rescues happened early enough, identifying victims, and answering tough questions from the press are another.
For locals, the immediate priorities remain straightforward: safe shelters, clean water, fast identification for loved ones, and clear information. For officials, the balancing act is more complicated — equally urgent relief operations while fending off criticism and trying to maintain public trust.
As Hat Yai and nearby provinces move from emergency response into recovery planning, the public will be watching for transparency, speed and accountability. Videos of walkouts and uncomfortable encounters with reporters may make for viral headlines, but the more lasting measure of success will be whether families receive timely help, whether the dead are identified with dignity, and whether economic support reaches the businesses and tourism workers who face a bleak winter ahead.
Until then, the questions raised in that short, tense pressroom moment will linger: did response times cost lives and livelihoods, and if so, how will authorities learn from this? The answers — and not just the reassurances — will determine whether confidence can be rebuilt in the weeks and months to come.


















Watching the minister cut the mic and leave felt like a textbook dodge, and it’s infuriating when people’s lives are at stake.
Dodge? It was pure chicken. If they did their job, fewer people would be dead and businesses wouldn’t be ruined.
I get that emotions run high, but we need a proper investigation too, not just finger-pointing and viral clips.
Viral clips matter because they shape public trust, yet rigorous after-action reviews with timelines and data are the only way to assign responsibility fairly.
Sometimes a walkout is worse than a lie; it signals contempt for victims and journalists.
Exactly, a contemptuous silence can be read as admission by the public even if legally it isn’t.
Postponing university exams was the right call given the trauma, but why did it take so long to decide?
As a teacher I agree the exams should be postponed, but students and parents need a clear new timetable today, not weeks of guesswork.
Yes, transparency on the new schedule and mental health support would calm anxiety, not just a vague postponement.
Schools are low priority when people are missing and bodies are piling up, but you still need to plan for students’ futures.
The discrepancy between 55 and 113 reported deaths is alarming and demonstrates systemic failure in data management during crises.
What does data management even mean? Just count people, right?
Counting seems simple, but in disaster zones identification, double-counting, and reporting delays complicate the figures; still, transparency on methodology is essential.
As someone on the ground, I can say chaos and poor coordination make numbers volatile, but officials must be honest about uncertainty.
The economic damage numbers read like a national emergency and will take years to fix, not just a PR statement.
Kasikorn’s estimate is plausible and the knock-on effects for tourism and supply chains could shrink GDP growth next quarter.
So what’s the plan then, besides collecting coconut brooms and taking selfies at shelters?
Recovery requires targeted fiscal support, fast insurance payouts, and infrastructure investment, which must be prioritized immediately.
My uncle’s shop is ruined and nobody has offered fair compensation, the govt needs to stop talking and act.
The whole walkout felt scripted to avoid accountability, and that kind of optics kills trust quicker than any flood.
From a reporter’s view the walkout was spontaneous and embarrassing, but more telling is the lack of follow-up answers afterwards.
I’d attend every press conference until they answer, but people are tired and don’t have time for theatrics.
Give the man a break; coordinating logistics under pressure is messy and politicians get unfair heat online.
Messy is an understatement when my family was stranded overnight while help arrived late, that is not just unfair heat.
I lost our house and waited hours for a boat, the officials kept saying warnings were sent, but we never got one.
Volunteers filled gaps because official resources were stretched thin, but we need systemic change not just applause.
We appreciate volunteers, but the government must fund and train rescue teams so ordinary people aren’t risking their lives.
There also needs to be legal scrutiny about evacuation protocols and who bears liability for delayed rescues.
The communication failures plus disputed numbers make it impossible to measure true economic loss in real time, which delays aid allocation.
So what should they release publicly to help analysts and victims now?
Daily situation reports with raw data, methodology notes, and maps of affected zones would enable faster, evidence-based responses.
Agree, and third-party audits of the initial response would help rebuild credibility and guide future readiness.
It made me cry watching that woman confront the Prime Minister and he walked away like it was lunchtime.
Treated like inconvenience not tragedy, exactly, and that will fuel protests and anger unless corrected.
I know lots of people who feel betrayed, especially families of missing people who want honest answers.
People forget that rapid mobilization happened and the military flew in supplies quickly; not everything is political.
Fast flights don’t excuse slow evacuations or unclear casualty reporting, those are separate failures.
I agree improvements are needed on communication, but let’s not pretend there was no effort to help.
Effort without accountability is hollow; independent review should balance recognition of first responders with critique of leadership.
The microphone moment will haunt them because it sums up a pattern: avoid direct answers and hope issues fade from the news cycle.
That tactic rarely works in the age of social media, and families will keep demanding transparency until actions match words.
We need continued reporting and public pressure to force full disclosure of timelines and decision-making.
Sustained investigative journalism coupled with official audits is the only path to systemic improvement and restored trust.
Why mention coconut brooms specifically? It feels patronizing to specify charity items instead of fixing the system.
Practical items matter on the ground, but the optics of listing brooms while people die is tone-deaf.
Exactly, it’s like they want to be helpful without looking at where the response chain actually broke down.
From a policy perspective, this is a case study in the necessity of clear SOPs for triage, evacuation, and public communications.
SOPs are useless if not practiced; simulation drills and community-based alert systems should be funded now.
Agreed, and reforms must be codified with timelines for implementation and independent monitoring to avoid recurrence.
I am tired of politicians acting surprised by floods they should have prepared for, climate patterns didn’t change overnight.
Climate adaptation planning and infrastructure investment have been chronically underfunded, which made this disaster worse.
Exactly, we warned about poor drainage projects and building in floodplains for years, but no action came.
This is sad and scary, my teacher told us about disasters but I never thought officials could be mean like that.
Children see leaders as examples, and politicians walking out sends a dangerous message about responsibility.
I wish leaders were kinder and answered honestly so families wouldn’t be so angry.
We should demand a public, independent inquiry with subpoena power, otherwise it will be swept under the rug.
Yes, legal mechanisms are needed to ensure victims get answers and compensation, not just media apologies.
And international observers could help if the government resists, transparency must be credible.
As someone planning to visit Thailand, this scares me, will the tourism areas be safe next season?
Tourism will return if rapid support reaches small businesses, but many operators need cash to reopen.
I want to help intentionally, not just drop money into a system where it disappears. Clear aid channels matter.
Why do they always talk about dignity when identifying bodies but never explain why the process was delayed?
Practical constraints like lab capacity and missing records explain some delays, but officials must report bottlenecks openly.
Exactly, openness would at least show they are trying instead of hiding incompetence.
There may be grounds for litigation if neglect or failure to warn is proven, especially for vulnerable communities.
Strategic litigation can produce accountability and policy change, but it requires resources and evidence gathering now.
Volunteer legal clinics should start documenting cases and advising affected families about options.
We’ve seen floods before, but this feels worse because everything is so built-up and officials made bad choices.
Urbanization without proper drainage and mangrove destruction make modern floods more devastating than historical ones.
Stop building on natural buffers and you reduce the scale of disasters, it’s common sense.
Listing items like coconut brooms has a patronizing tone, but practical donations do help when logistics are organized.
If a central hub and airlift are truly coordinated, donated goods will reach those in need fast, but management is key.
Media footage will keep pressure on officials, but viral outrage alone won’t fix systemic failures without policy follow-through.
True, but public outrage is often the only catalyst that forces governments to act quickly and transparently.
Then the challenge is converting that outrage into structured demands and legislative change, not just momentary attention.
I’m more worried about the families waiting for identification; bureaucracy must not add to their pain.
Agencies should publish expected timelines and contact points for families, too much mystery breeds suspicion.
Yes, clarity and empathy from officials would make a huge difference in people’s daily suffering.
My dad was at a shelter and he said supplies were uneven, some areas got tons while others were ignored.
Distribution bias happens when local leaders are excluded from planning, empowering community committees helps fairness.
We need local voices at the table, not just top-down pronouncements from afar.
International aid protocols recommend pre-positioned resources and clear chain-of-command, which seemed lacking here.
Adopting international best practices adapted to local context would reduce response times and confusion.
And documenting failures publicly will help other regions learn before the next disaster strikes.
Heard the mic cut and thought maybe the feed glitched, but the walkout was deliberate and shameful.
No glitch, deliberate. That deliberate silence speaks louder than any explanation they avoided.
I will be watching budget allocations closely now; words mean little if money keeps flowing into PR instead of resilience.
Exactly, budget transparency post-crisis reveals priorities and whether lessons are being funded.
We should demand itemized recovery spending and public dashboards for progress.
If the official death toll is being downplayed to save face, that’s morally reprehensible and should be exposed.
Independent verification by NGOs and journalists can help reconcile numbers and protect families’ rights to truth.
Then let’s support those independent efforts and pressure for full disclosure now.