APNU urges national strategy to deal with flooding

APNU leader David Granger

The A Partnership for National Unity (APNU) has called on the People’s Progressive Part/Civic administration to implement a national strategy to break the cycle of flooding that has been repeatedly plaguing all the regions of the country in recent years.

In a statement on Tuesday, February 7, APNU said that the December-February rainy season, when the heaviest rains seem to occur, has become a time of annual anguish for most of the population. Despite the high cost of damage to homes, loss of crops and spread of water-borne and vector-borne diseases over the years, the administration has never implemented a national, long-term, comprehensive counter-flooding strategy.

“It seems inclined to pursue the short-term tactic of providing relief and compensation to flood victims rather than the long-term task of improving the infrastructure to prevent flooding,” APNU contended.

According to the party, farmers and other residents all across the country – from along the Aruka River in Region One; to the Pomeroon River in Region Two; Canals Polder in Region Three; Mahaica River in Region Four; Mahaicony River in Region Five and Yakusari in the Black Bush Polder in Region Six – are suffering from the current floods which started in early January.

APNU said hinterland residents still remember how the floods – at Waramadong in Region Seven, at Mahdia in Region Eight: in the Rupununi in Region Nine and at Kwakwani in Region 10 – also wrought havoc with their lives in 2010 and 2011.

“No part of the country it seems has ever been safe from the scourge of floods. The system of coastal conservancies and canals has been compromised by the decline of the sugar plantation system and the rise of new housing schemes and townships. This has been aggravated by poor solid waste management; neglect of the drainage and irrigation infrastructure, including kokers, the deliberate destruction of drainage canals to facilitate construction of houses by ‘dry-weather’ contractors and rising sea levels owing to global warming.”

APNU pointed out that the PPP/C administration, after more than 19 years in office, cannot blame anyone but itself for the repetitive, annual disastrous flooding.

“Climate change and rising sea levels will not disappear overnight and the administration has to be aware that – at least since the catastrophic ‘Great Flood’ of 2005 – weather patterns will never be the same again. It must be clear that the current adhoc measures to provide relief and compensation to victims cannot solve the problem of annual floods. The PPP/C administration must formulate a strategic plan to protect our people from this yearly distress.”

Government on Monday said that dam maintenance and construction, and deployment of drainage pumps, and excavators are some of the measures being implemented by the Agriculture Ministry in light of the La Nina phenomenon, as interventions intensify to ensure that farmers’ losses are at a minimal.

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