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Bamboo residents apologise to ministers, ask for help - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

For four nights and three days, residents of Bamboo No 2 have been underwater. Koi fish make their homes in the flooded streets. Four-wheel-drive vans take the chance to drive through, but their mufflers become covered. And a resident has apologised on behalf of his community for the tongue lashing given to the ministers who visited on Tuesday.

Zahid Mohammed said, "We're having a rough time. We're waiting on the pumps the ministers promised, but apparently, it's stalled on the way. We appreciated that they came. But the promises weren't fulfilled."

[caption id="attachment_988586" align="alignnone" width="1024"] In what has become a regular sight, a boat is used to transport residents through floodwaters on Nabbie Street, Bamboo No 2, Valsayn South on Wednesday. Photo by Roger Jacob[/caption]

Asked how he felt about the treatment of the ministers on Tuesday, "They were not run out. They just had some hard talking with some of the villagers who were frustrated and are still frustrated."

A man who identified himself as Mohanlal Beharry from Mohan Street said, "We could apologise on behalf of those persons because we do need some assistance."

Mohammed echoed Beharry, "We really need the assistance because we house under water. I live on Jaffar Street and my house under two to three feet of water."

Beharry said his house was under 12 feet of water as it was closer to the Caroni riverbank. He said a neighbour's house on Rattan Street was under nine feet of water.

Beharry said he lost many kois, goldfish and African cichlids to the floods but hoped he would be able to find them again.

[caption id="attachment_988587" align="alignnone" width="1024"] A resident of Nabbie Street, Bamboo No 2, Valsayn South, keeps his spirits up as he waves to Newsday from his flooded home on Wednesday. Photo by Roger Jacob[/caption]

Another resident, Anthony Sookdeo lost his two turtles and hoped they were alive.

Mohammed said, "We organised tractors with pump and they're gonna help us pump out some of the water."

While driving on Nabbie Street in a resident's van, Newsday saw T&TEC workers using an amphibious vehicle to disconnect power lines that could become hazardous given the high level of floodwater.

One man who was sitting in the van commented.

"You know the vehicle from Dumb and Dumber? That's it. They buy it and paint it yellow."

Residents believed the water would begin to subside by Friday. One man recalled that the run-off took five days, when the area flooded in 2018.

Dolsy Rattan, who said her house on the corner of Rattan Street never flooded before, said water levels had already started to fall, as palms in her yard and the culvert, which were below water on Tuesday, became visible on Wednesday.

Rattan's neighbour helped her lift her stove and fridge off the floor of her home but when he returned to check them, he did not believe they would be salvageable.

Rattan said she lost her husband five mo

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