BOHO man Gerard Farmer, who suffers from diabetes, has been stranded in his home for days while his wife Una and daughter Aoife have had to take refuge in an Enniskillen hotel.
The flooding in Boho has reached “a critical level” according to Councillor Bernice Swift while local priest Father Jimmy McPhillips has suggested that it is now a “humanitarian issue.” 
With flood levels still high, Mr. Farmer has told The Impartial Reporter that he fears for his safety. 
“I have two floods to get through just to get to the road. You can get through them on a tractor, but it would be hairy enough to get out. The flood outside my lane would be about 30 inches, it’s the worst ever I seen it. I have had to stock up with food to last for a few days. I am a diabetic, insulin dependent, and if I had to call for help there would be no way a doctor would get to me,” he said. 
Father McPhillips of Sacred Heart Church said residents in Boho feel “cut off from the world.”
“When you have people cut off from the town, cut from their neighbours, cut off from the world, it is a humanitarian issue. Boho has become impassible,” he said.
Parishioners travelled to Mass on Sunday on tractors and trailers. One young man, who was due to be enrolled for confirmation, was stranded and could not make it in. “There are people who are housebound, I am not able to visit the sick in their homes. There is one lady who is watching the floods get closer to her home. I am concerned that if anyone dies how do I get out to anoint them? It is unbelievable,” he said.
Some of the roads affected by flooding in Boho, include the Coalbog Road, Lisdead Road and Samsonagh Road. Independent Councillor Bernice Swift says a “concerted Government response is long overdue.” “Ministers of the past have ignored us, we will not allow wrong decisions to happen again. A new river should be started at Bunahone townland flowing down through Churchill and into the Erne. This would cut off the head water into Derrygonnelly and Boho,” she said.