Senior Investigative Reporter
shaliza.hassanali@guardian.co.tt
Five weeks after their homes were wrecked by floods, some residents of Barrackpore, Penal and Woodland are yet to be compensated.
For them, there will be no Christmas celebrations.
Chairman of the Penal/Debe Regional Corporation (PDRC) Gowtam Maharaj said the Corporation conducted an initial damage assessment of households and farmers affected by the recent floods which was passed on to the Ministry of Social Development and Family Services.
The Corporation’s Disaster Management Unit registered close to 1,000 flood victims.
“The real issue of financial support for appliances and for areas where people would have lost income, I don’t have any information that those were met,” said Maharaj
He has been getting calls from burgesses asking when they will be compensated.
“Things have been far too tardy,” he said
Minister of Social Development and Family Services Donna Cox said on December 12, the Ministry of Rural Development and Local Government “emailed the spreadsheet of names of families affected” and the ministry is processing these claims.
“If they are entitled, I expect payment to be made in January,” she said.
Double woes
For flood victims Dolchan Chandrabhan and his ailing wife Glory, this festive season is doubly sad.
Still reeling from last month’s devastating floods, Dolchan’s one wish for Christmas is that Glory, 56, recover from stage four breast and bone cancer.
The Chandrabhans were among hundreds affected by the deluge which left residents stranded in their homes and shut down businesses, prompting local authorities to declare the Penal/Debe region a disaster zone.
However, they have been left in limbo as they await compensation after losing hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of valuables, household appliances, furniture, animals and crops.
On Tuesday, the Sunday Guardian visited the affected communities to hear from flood victims how they have been coping as Christmas approaches.
Many said they have been struggling to get back on their feet, while others admitted their homes are still in disarray.
In some homes stoves, fridges, wardrobes, beds and freezers were stacked on bricks and makeshift wooden racks to prevent them from getting wet.
There were no decorations, no smell of fresh paint or yards being cleaned - all signs of Christmas preparations.
Some of the affected residents are now considering out of their flood-prone communities.
“It has not been easy,” an emotional Dolchan said, as he recounted his family’s ordeal while sitting on the staircase of his Nanan North Trace, Barrackpore, home.
Dolchan has been facing two major challenges. First, he had to deal with the news of Glory’s cancer.
“It floored me...after living together for 38 joyous years,” he said.
When Glory’s health started to deteriorate in July and she became bedridden, Dolchan quit his job as a security officer to look after her.
In November, he faced another uphill battle with the flood. He said in less than 30 minutes his yard was under three feet of water.
The couple were marooned on the upper floor of their wooden home for four days until the water subsided.
“We were trapped inside the house,” Dolchan, 60, said, adding that no one came to help, provide hampers or assess their losses.
Dolchan said Christmas is the last thing on his mind.
“I can’t study that. The condition Glory is in, tears does fill my eyes when I walk into the room and see she lying down on the bed,” he said.
His life savings were used up during the six months he spent taking care of his wife, and the couple now survives on Glory’s monthly $2,000 disability grant.
“I wish God could transfer Glory’s pain to me, so her suffering would be no more. At times it is unbearable. I can’t imagine what she is going through,” he said, shaking his head from side to side.
Despite his difficulties, Dolchan said his faith remains strong and he declared that with God, all things are possible.
Christmas just an ordinary day
Pensioner Daisey John has lived through many floods in her 75 years but she said last month’s disaster was the scariest.
“I have never seen so much water in my life. Outside was like a sea. I was scared to death,” said the three-time cancer survivor who had to flee her Moolchan Trace, Penal, home.
When John returned the following day, her cupboards were water-soaked and one of the bedposts was destroyed.
Just six weeks before the flood, she buried her brother and mother who died days apart. First, her brother died of a heart attack while standing on the side of the road, then her mother passed away after suffering from cancer.
John said her daughter wants her to leave the flood-prone community and move in with her in Freeport but she is reluctant to give up her humble home, stating she likes the solitary life.
“I get so used to this (flood)... you would not believe it. I can’t run from it. There is nothing I can do again to prevent that water from getting in there,” she said, pointing to her home.
She said one solution is to demolish the house, backfill the land and rebuild.
“But I don’t have money for that. It would cost a fortune,” she said.
John didn’t submit her name for flood relief. All she received were two small hampers.
She admitted that whenever the skies turn grey or black, she is overcome with fear and anxiety would overcome her body.
“You keep thinking if the next flood will be worse than the last. You see on this street, we don’t have good drainage for the water to run off. That is the main problem.”
Still grieving over the deaths and trying to cope with the flood, John said she has no plans of celebrating Christmas.
“For me, I would spend Christmas like any ordinary day,” John said.
Year of suffering
This past month has been difficult for 52-year-old Ramdeo Ramsawack who lost upward of $20,000 in furniture and household appliances in the flood.
It took Ramsawack, a labourer, years to furnish his home Kanhai North Street, Barrackpore. He Ramsawack had to stretch his daily $200 salary.
When the flood swept away his worldly possessions, Ramsawack went into a state of depression.
“I felt empty inside,” he said.
To make matters worse the father of two did not submit his name to the Corporation for compensation and his losses were not assessed.
“It has been a constant struggle since last month. Work real slow. This Christmas is shaping up to be my worst ever. What is there to enjoy when your place is in a mess and you have nothing nice to eat or drink in your house?”
Ramsawack’s home was one of the hardest hit by the floods. Water from a nearby river and drain entered his home.
He feels it would be better to relocate and has begun hunting for a piece of land.
“I see a piece of land in Barrackpore for $120,000 but I have to save or take a loan,” he said
Ramsawack is hoping that God will smile on him in 2025 because this year has been filled with suffering and struggles.