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This community in Sri Lanka's Kandy District is a mass of mud and loss.
The narrow, filthy streets in Gampola are filled with broken furniture, sodden toys and soiled mattresses. A torrent of floodwater ripped through this neighbourhood and many people had no time to escape.
Trying to reach their now destroyed homes is like wading through treacle - the mud knee-deep. Many locals say they were not warned about the threat Cyclone Ditwah posed here before it struck last Friday, and weren't told to evacuate.
They say they've received very little help since. Resourceful neighbours were left to try to help rescue survivors.
But some had to carry the bodies of the dead, too. Mohamed Fairoos was one of them.
"We took five bodies from here," he says, gesturing to a house full of debris, where mattresses hang drying over the balcony. "We took nine bodies in total and handed them over to the hospital." He appears both shocked and exasperated at the lack of support this community received.
"When I took the bodies, the police, the navy, no one sent for us." He tells me he even posted a video online appealing for boats, hoping it might help. I ask him if he thinks the government has done enough.
"No," he says forcefully. "No one called for us.
No one helped us. No one gave us any boats." Read more: Families count the cost of devastating floods 'Five people were killed here' Just a few doors down, a group of volunteers have come to clear another home filled with floodwater.
"Five people were killed here," one of them tells me. Five of them came from one family: a mother, father, their two daughters and son.
Kumudu Wijekon tells me she was friends with them and they'd fled here to a friend's house, hoping to escape the threat. "There was heavy rain, but they didn't think there would be flooding.
They left their own home to save themselves from landslides. If they had stayed, they would have survived." 'We don't have a single rupee' A short drive away, Chamilaka Dilrukshi is sobbing inside the photography studio she shares with her husband Ananda.
They have two children aged four and 11. Chamilaka is clutching a bag of rice - she says it's been donated by a friend and it's all they have to eat.
Everything in the shop is wrecked - expensive cameras and lighting equipment covered in thick layers of mud, and outside, rows of broken frames and ripped pictures. They think they've lost nearly £2,500 and their home is severely damaged.
She weeps as she tells us: "We don't have a single rupee to start our business again. We spent all of our savings on trying to build our house." Like Mohamed, she believed they should have been warned.
"We didn't know anything. If we did, we would have taken our cameras and our computers out.
We just didn't know it was coming." Anger at government's perceived failings Sri Lankan president Anura Kumara Dissanayake has declared a state of emergency to deal with the aftermath of the cyclone, and international aid has arrived. But many people are angry at the government's perceived failings.
It's been criticised for not taking the warnings from meteorologists seriously two weeks before the cyclone made landfall, as well as for not communicating enough messages in the Tamil language. It is going to take places like Gampola a long time to rebuild, repair and restore trust.
And in a country still recovering from an economic collapse, nothing is guaranteed..