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		 Malaysia 
		flood response denounced anew as nearly quarter million flee 
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		[December 30, 2014] 
		KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Malaysia's 
		worst flooding in a decade has forced nearly a quarter of a million 
		people from their homes, officials said on Tuesday, with the government 
		coming under renewed fire for its perceived slow response. | 
			
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			 The National Security Council said that "exceptionally high" water 
			levels had cut off rescuers from relief centers as the death toll 
			rose to 21 across the northeast. Fifteen people have been killed in 
			neighboring southern Thailand. 
 Most criticism was directed at Prime Minister Najib Razak for his 
			absence as the disaster unfolded after being photographed playing 
			golf with President Barack Obama in Hawaii.
 
 "No matter how prepared we are, there will always be a bigger and 
			more devastating disaster that tests the capability and resources of 
			the country," the council said in a statement to the online news 
			portal, the Malaysian Insider.
 
 Opposition member Tony Pua denounced the government's reluctance to 
			declare a state of emergency and its "complete lack of urgency" in 
			calling a council meeting.
 
			
			 "We are running a headless government with no urgent, cohesive and 
			proactive response to the arising chaos," Pua said in a statement.
 Northeastern Malaysia and southern Thailand are hit by flooding 
			during the annual northeast monsoon but this year the rain has been 
			particularly heavy.
 
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			Malaysia's eastern states are home to many rice fields but officials 
			have not provided an initial estimate of damage.
 Najib on Tuesday visited Kelantan, one of eight flooded states where 
			the water levels have receded to allow many of the major roads to 
			reopen.
 
 Five southern Thai provinces - Narathiwat, Yala, Pattani, 
			Phatthalung and Songkhla - were still flooded. Nearly 10,000 people 
			have been evacuated.
 
 (Reporting By Al-Zaquan Amer Hamzah in KUALA LUMPUR and Kaweewit 
			Kaewjinda in BANGKOK; Editing by Praveen Menon and Nick Macfie)
 
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