Stabroek News

Spring tides smash West Dem sea defence, houses

-three villages flooded, Leonora Hospital closed

- By Dreylan Johnson

Towering spring tides yesterday flooded three villages on the West Coast Demerara, destroying houses, smashing 75 feet of the Uitvlugt sea defence, drowning livestock and displacing patients of the Leonora Hospital.

The high tides began at around 3 pm on Thursday, according to reports, flooding the streets and bottom houses of residents who reside closest to the seawall. But it was the waves that crept up in the wee hours of yesterday that caused the most damage, and in the aftermath of the early morning destructio­n, residents had braced themselves in anticipati­on of another rising tide, scheduled to hit again at 3 pm.

At close to 4 pm, scores of residents had congregate­d in the streets at Uitvlugt, some with cameras raised, as the water poured in around them, draining in torrents into the surroundin­g trenches and dams, inundating the area within minutes.

The scene was mirrored at Leonora and Stewartvil­le, where similar devastatio­n was experience­d.

Temporary disaster relief camps have been set up at the Uitvlugt Community Centre and the Uitvlugt Secondary School, to accommodat­e residents affected by the flooding.

According to a release from the Department of Public Informatio­n (DPI), the Civil Defence Commission (CDC) will reportedly be providing 100 camp cots, 100 blankets, 100 pillows, cooking utensils and meals to residents displaced by the flooding.

These meals—breakfast, lunch and dinner—are being served until Monday.

It was related that sanitation and cleaning hampers are also being prepared for distributi­on.

Meanwhile, residents were bracing for another round with the high tides today.

Earlier, Chief Sea and River Defence officer, Kevin Samad told the DPI that approximat­ely 75 feet of the upper part of the concrete crest wall of the Uitvlugt seawall had broken resulting in the area being flooded. The force of the water also broke off a portion of the asphalt on the “Old Well side” road, and transporte­d it several feet away, where it rested in the middle of the street. At Leonora, a section of the seawall was eroded, leaving behind panels of freshly exposed mud. At Stewartvil­le, fences, shacks and vegetation were levelled, and workmen, attached to BK Internatio­nal, were seen using an excavator to fill mud into a section of the seawall that had broken off.

50 Ft waves

According to a CDC Damage Assessment Report, shared by DPI yesterday morning, the waves rose in excess of 25 feet, and extended as far as 50 feet, to the roofs of homes.

It was reported that 32 households in Stewartvil­le were affected by the flooding, including 11 in the squatting area and 21 regularise­d residents. Additional­ly, the waters reportedly affected three of four blocks within Ocean View, Uitvlugt.

The effects of the rise in tide could be seen even a few villages away, where, at La Jalousie, a carpet of refuse, hundreds of plastic bottles among displaced logs and twigs, lay strewn along the dam.

“In split seconds, the place was flooded… By the time I woke up a little after 4, I think it was, and we moved the vehicles from the garage, by the time the vehicles came out, and we went back in, water was knee high,” Uitvlugt resident Shaleeza Khan recounted, stating that she had close to 15 inches of water in her yard.

“…The time since I’ve been living here, the only time I know it flooded was in 2013 and it was nothing compared to this, and people who grew up here, like old people, they’re saying that they’ve never seen anything like this,” she stated. Khan has lived at Ocean View, Uitvlugt for 19 years.

Residents were left in awe at the towering waves that crashed over the seawall and the flooding that followed.

“It was terrible. Terrible. I live here, born and grow, I never reach up something like this,” Richie Mahadeo, a shop owner at 3rd Street Uitvlugt related, recalling that the village had experience­d a flood in 2013, but nothing of that magnitude.

Mahadeo lost hundreds of thousands in food and grocery items and suffered damage to electrical appliances. The zinc fence

 ??  ?? A section of the sea defence near Uitvlugt, which has been fractured.
A section of the sea defence near Uitvlugt, which has been fractured.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana