FAMILIES who have been left without water for over 24 hours have blasted the water shortages as “pandemonium”.
A burst pipe on the Isle of Sheppey in Kent means residents have reportedly been forced to line up in five-mile long queues for bottles of water.
Thousands of people have been queuing for waters on the Isle of Sheppey[/caption] Bottled water supplies being handed out in Leysdown, Kent[/caption] Locals have blasted Southern Water for the shortages[/caption] Residents say people are beginning to panic[/caption]One local Dave Boswell says people on the island are now beginning to panic and things are “getting dangerous”.
Six schools, several shops, bars, cafes and restaurants and even the island’s hospital have been forced to shut their doors because of the water shortages.
It comes as the UK has been hit with sweltering water – with the mercury soaring above 30C.
Dave told The Sun: “Yesterday there were collection points to pick up water but the queues were five miles long. It was pandemonium.
“It’s now getting to the stage where it’s dangerous. There’s not a drop to drink on the island.
“If you don’t have a car then you’re stuck on the island with no water. It feels like we’ve been abandoned.
“There are literally people in the streets shouting ‘does anyone have any spare water?’.
“At the water stations things are starting to get heated. It’s getting out of control. There is literally nothing.”
Last night Southern Water announced that the water mains had been fixed – but this morning they revealed they are still carrying out works.
They have apologised for the blunder and said the issue has been exacerbated by a high demand for water.
Video shows desperate residents being forced to wash themselves in the sea as the shortages move into the second day.
Dave continued: “It’s just the way they’ve dealt with it that’s so frustrating – saying it’s fixed when it clearly isn’t.
“There’s things like we haven’t been able to flush our toilets for 24 hours and with the heat things have gotten pretty grim in that regard.
“Southern water has lied to us. They told us that the situation was fixed – but we all woke up this morning in the same situation as yesterday. Nothing has come through. We’ve just been forgotten about.
“They were meant to have water points set up again today from 7am but now they’re saying they won’t be ready until 9am.”
Southern yesterday said they were delivering water to any customers on their priority service register.
However, locals have claimed that many on the register are still waiting on a delivery.
One woman on Twitter wrote: “My daughter is nine months pregnant with another young child and called priority number yesterday morning and is still waiting.”
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In a statement this morning the company said: “We’re so sorry to say we’re still working on bringing supplies back. We have teams on site 24/7, and in the meantime the 3 bottled water stations are open this morning.”
It comes as the UK’s scorching heatwave is set to last for more than a week.
The country has been warmer than parts of the Maldives in the past few days with temperatures expected to peak at 33C today.
A Cobra meeting took place yesterday as Government ministers draw up their first-ever heatwave emergency response.
The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) has also issued a level three heat-health alert for the South East.
The weather has already caused some carnage – with a section of railway track bursting into flames in Battersea, South London, yesterday.
Fires also spread across the Army’s Salisbury Plain Training Area on Monday.
Bookies have now slashed the odds on a possible hosepipe ban, and water bosses have urged customers to cut down by not washing cars or sprinkling lawns.
The Sun has approached Southern Water for comment.
The heatwave will continue over the next week[/caption] Temperatures are expected to reach 33C today[/caption]