Reprinted from Caribbean Net News
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Guyana government may set up tent city for 20,000 evacuees
by Norman 'Gus' Thomas
Caribbean Net News Senior Correspondent
Monday, January 24, 2005

GEORGETOWN, Guyana: Following days of torrential rains that caused one of the most severe floods to hit Guyana in over 100 years, officials at the Joint Operation Centre (JOC) told Caribbean Net News that the situation looks grim, adding that the government of President Jagdeo is now looking at constructing a tent city for thousands of people who have had to evacuate to higher ground. 

According to the JOC, with a capacity to house 20,000 the city is to be erected at Timehri, the area in which the country's lone international airport is located. The make-shift accommodation is for persons from the hardest hit East Coast areas. 

Speaking at a late-night press conference held at Police Headquarters, Eve Leary in Georgetown, John Lewis, JOC Commander, broke the news to the media on the situation and said that an aerial reconnaissance team from the Guyana Defence Force (GDF) flew over the East Coast and was unable to "sight" any dry ground. 

According to the Commander, the team reported seeing nothing but a wide sheet of water covering almost everywhere. 

"We believe that entire villages would have to be evacuated," said Lewis, adding that the facility would take a week to be erected. 

As serious as the situation is, Lewis pointed out that the JOC and the Government are working overtime to solve the problem without having to declare of a state of emergency. Another concern for the JOC is the fact that once the decision to evacuate the villages has been made, then security arrangements would have to be put in place to protect the homes of persons who have left. Regions Three, Four and Five have all been declared disaster areas. 

Emergency officials told Caribbean Net News Saturday that south Georgetown and other parts of the city and along the East Coast of Demerara as far as Mahaica are the heaviest hit areas and there is the great concern as more rain has been forecast to fall. . 

In contacting the Office of the President for an update, Information Liaison Officer Robert Persaud revealed that Government is in contact with the United States Southern Command seeking assistance but said that a dollar figure, in terms of aid flows, has not been made know. 

Meanwhile, relief funds started flowing into Guyana on Thursday last as the IDB announcing a $20M grant. The government of Brazil also sent in some 16 tonnes of food supplies and President Bharrat Jagdeo announced that the Caribbean Development Bank (CDB) will be releasing US$500,000 to the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Response Agency (CEDERA) to help Guyana.

Jagdeo said CDB President, Dr. Compton Bourne, has informed him that the bank had already dispatched US$100,000 in a grant to CEDERA for the Guyana relief effort. 

Meantime, Police had to be called to the Civil Defence Commission (CDC) office at Thomas Lands on Friday, as scores of flood-hit victims showed up seeking "something to eat". The lawmen worked to restore order by establishing two lines extending to the east and west along Thomas Road, where many waited for up to four hours to receive the rations. 

One woman told Caribbean Net News she waited in line for four and a half hours and said the items that she received was not enough for one day. 

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