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Thailand, criticised over Bangkok building collapse, to test mobile alerts

Thailand, criticised over Bangkok building collapse, to test mobile alerts

Thailand will conduct tests of a cellphone disaster alert system, senior officials said on Wednesday, after criticism that no alarm was sent after last month's deadly Myanmar earthquake caused damage in Bangkok.
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Director General of the Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation (DDPM) Phasakorn Boonyalak said the Cell Broadcast System (CBS) will undergo a test run next month in localised areas including the sprawling capital, which was badly shaken by the 7.7-magnitude quake in neighbouring Myanmar.
The system will use three mobile networks to send warning messages 'quickly and with wide coverage, both on natural disaster and security threats', he told a news conference.
Starting on May 2 with the smallest target area – four city hall buildings – there will be three test runs, with the third and largest drill covering the whole of Bangkok and Chiang Mai provinces on May 13.
02:26
Powerful magnitude 7.7 earthquake strikes Myanmar, buildings sway and fall in Bangkok
Powerful magnitude 7.7 earthquake strikes Myanmar, buildings sway and fall in Bangkok
Residents' cellphones will get a pop-up message on their screens in Thai and English, accompanied by a siren, Phasakorn said.

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