Indian Experienced Thailand’s Quake, Know How It Was In His Own Words

When the ground began to tremble violently beneath his feet, Prem Kishore Mohanty from India was sitting in the auditorium of his daughter’s school in Thailand’s Bangkok. It was supposed to be a routine sports day event – children competing, parents cheering – until the tremors hit.
“I felt my head spinning, and I had to sit down. I could see the overhead lights swaying, and the chairs moving,” Mr Mohanty. “Then the school PA system kicked in, ordering everyone to run towards the outdoor field. We were told to avoid the lane next to the school that was surrounded by high-rise towers. The water from the swimming pools in these buildings started cascading down the sides like waterfalls.”
Videos have surfaced showing water from swimming pools on the upper floors of the InterContinental Bangkok, a plush hotel in the city, falling off the edges because of the tremors. The earthquake, measured at 7.7 magnitude, had its epicentre in Myanmar but sent powerful tremors across the border into Thailand. Bangkok was abruptly halted.

Earthquakes are rare in Bangkok, a city more accustomed to heat and monsoons than seismic activity. For Mr Mohanty and his family, 5-year-old daughter and 42-year-old wife who are residents of Sukhumvit in central Bangkok, the initial moments were marked by confusion. “It was scary and confusing. The initial feeling was one of shock. But we are doing fine now.
The Mohantys live in an apartment tower. The evacuation from their building was sudden, with little time to prepare. “People were told to use the fire escape stairwell and wait outside the buildings,” he said. The impact of the earthquake was uneven. After an inspection from local officials, Mr Mohanty and his family managed to enter their house. Although the building has not sustained heavy damage, there is a crack on Mr Mohanty’s wall.
Mohanty said my neighbour on the 22nd floor is a retired German man who ran out with just his pet cat after his bed moved from one side of the room to another. He ran all the way down the stairs and did not stop till he reached the lobby. We have a lot of Japanese expats in the lower Sukhumvit area, and even they have not seen such a big quake in their lives.

Despite the shock of such a rare event, Bangkok was not entirely unprepared. Earthquake protocols, established after the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami tragedy, remain in place. “Such a big earthquake is rare in Bangkok, and coming on a busy Friday afternoon, it brought the city to a standstill. Public transport is currently suspended. Traffic is blocked all around.
The tremors led to the suspension of Bangkok’s metro and light rail services. Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra declared a state of emergency, interrupting an official visit to Phuket to hold an “urgent meeting” on the crisis. Even outside Thailand, the quake’s reach was felt. China’s southwest Yunnan province reported tremors of 7.9 magnitude, according to Beijing’s quake agency. The tremors were felt in parts of eastern India as well.