Dense haze from Indonesian forest fires has caused some of the worst pollution in southern Thailand for a decade, officials said Thursday, cancelling flights in an area popular with tourists.
For nearly two months, thousands of fires caused by slash-and-burn farming have choked vast expanses of Southeast Asia, causing rates of respiratory illnesses to soar, schools to close and scores of flights and some international events to be cancelled.
Thailand usually avoids the worst effects of Indonesia's fires, which annually blight Malaysia and Singapore.
But in recent weeks prevailing winds have brought the smog further north, stoking tensions and creating a headache for the country's vital tourism industry.
Thai officials Thursday said air quality had dipped to unhealthy levels in seven southern provinces, with particularly high readings in Songkhla province where some flights have been delayed or turned back.
"It's considered a crisis. It's the worst in 10 years," Halem Jemarican, head of Songkhla's Environment Office, told AFP.
"The key factor is the wind. It's strong at the hot spot origins but when it reaches Thailand the winds weaken so the haze stays around for longer," he added.
Late Thursday a Samui airport official, who withheld her name, told AFP "all flights had been cancelled since 10 am because of the haze".
Earlier, transport officials said two flights from Bangkok to the island had returned to base Thursday while another flight from Singapore was diverted to Phuket.
Southern Thailand boasts many pristine beaches and is an especially popular tourism destination.
Earlier this month several planes packed with beach-bound tourists to Phuket and Koh Samui were forced to turn back because of haze.
Thailand's Public Health Ministry said it had distributed 55,700 facemasks in the south with a further 40,000 on the way.
In a statement the country's Pollution Control Department said it had "called for Indonesia to implement measures to reduce burning in order to mitigate haze".
Land is illegally cleared by burning in Indonesian tropical peatlands, which are rich in carbon but rapidly being drained and cleared to make way for agriculture -- particularly fast-expanding palm oil plantations.
While the loudest complaints have come from relatively affluent Singapore and Kuala Lumpur, it is poor Indonesian villagers who are suffering most.
Pictures this week revealed a thick yellow haze smothering Palangkaraya in central Indonesia, with locals forced to go about their daily life regardless of the extreme health hazards.
Experts warn the current outbreak of pollution is on track to become the worst ever, exacerbated by bone-dry conditions caused by the El Nino weather phenomenon.
Later Thursday Thailand's interior ministry said authorities were preparing to "trigger artificial rain" -- through a form of cloud-seeding -- and considering closing down schools in an urgent letter to its southern provinces.
Indonesia earlier this month agreed to accept international help after failing for weeks to douse the fires.
Last week it launched its biggest fire-fighting push yet, with dozens of planes backing up thousands of personnel on the ground.
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