Thousands evacuated in Vietnam after record rain triggers floods

Sign up now: Get insights on Asia's fast-moving developments

Floodwaters inundating the Imperial City in Hue, Vietnam, on Oct 28.

Floodwaters inundating the Imperial City in Hue, Vietnam, on Oct 28.

PHOTO: AFP

Follow topic:

Thousands of people in Vietnam were evacuated from their homes after record rainfall of more than 1m in 24 hours submerged the central city of Hue, the environment ministry said on Oct 28.

Three measuring stations in Hue recorded rainfall from 1m to 1.7m in a 24-hour period from Oct 26 to 27, the ministry said in a statement. The previous 24-hour rain record was 0.99m, set in Hue in 1999.

Heavy rainfall has inundated Vietnam’s central coastal region since the weekend, closing schools and dumping rain on Hue, a former imperial city and now a Unesco world heritage site.

More than 8,600 people in four central provinces have been evacuated to schools and other public buildings since Oct 25 due to risks from severe flooding and landslides, according to the environment ministry.

“This was the biggest flood I have experienced, with water levels in my house about 40cm higher than that of 1999,” said 56-year-old Hue resident Tran Anh Tuan.

“My ground floor is under about 2m of floodwaters. We had moved all essential furniture upstairs. We have been in the dark over a day as power was cut off,” Mr Tuan told AFP from his three-storey house in central Hue.

An image published by state media on Oct 27 showed a room in a main hospital in the city flooded with murky water and two patients seated on gurneys.

Tourists in ancient Hoi An town were pictured in state media navigating narrow streets in boats while AFP journalists saw authorities evacuate several people from heavily flooded areas.

“The level of natural disaster risk due to flash floods and landslides is at the highest level,” said Mai Van Khiem, director of the National Centre for Hydro-Meteorological Forecasting, according to a government website.

More rain was forecast for the central provinces into Oct 29, he added.

Some schools were closed in the cities of Hue and Danang beginning Nov 1 while the railway linking the country’s north and south saw delays due to flooding.

Scientists say human-driven climate change is making extreme weather events like storms and floods more deadly and destructive.

Vietnam’s mountainous north and capital Hanoi were under severe flooding in early October following typhoons Bualoi and Matmo.

Natural disasters, mostly storms, floods and landslides, left 187 people dead or missing in the South-east Asian nation in the first nine months of 2025.

Total economic losses were estimated at more than US$610 million (S$789.92 million), the General Statistics Office said. AFP

See more on