A complete of 28 individuals have died following Hurricane Melissa’s rampage throughout Jamaica, the federal government has confirmed.
Melissa, one of many strongest storms on file to make landfall within the Caribbean, introduced with it winds of as much as 185mph when it hit the island earlier this week.
The Crimson Cross described it as a “catastrophe of unprecedented disaster”.
Melissa ravaged by Jamaica, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Cuba.
It weakened by the point it reached Cuba on Wednesday morning however nonetheless introduced devastation – with homes collapsed and roads blocked.
An announcement from the federal government of Jamaica stated it was “deeply saddened to verify 28 fatalities related to the passage of Hurricane Melissa”.
It went on: “We lengthen heartfelt condolences to the households, buddies, and communities mourning their family members.”
Eyewitness: ‘Send help’ – the desperate pleas from Hurricane Melissa survivors
The affirmation got here because the first British repatriation flight was setting off from the island on Saturday night native time.
The flight, chartered by the International, Commonwealth and Growth Workplace, was for these “unable to depart Jamaica on industrial routes”.
Important aid provides at the moment are rolling into among the hardest hit areas.
The UK authorities is mobilising a further £5m in emergency humanitarian funding – on prime of £2.5m introduced earlier this week – to help the area’s restoration.
This new funding will allow the UK to ship humanitarian provides – together with greater than 3,000 shelter kits and over 1,500 solar-powered lanterns to assist these whose houses have been broken and people with out energy.
Learn extra:
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The UK is working with the World Meals Programme and Crimson Cross, to make sure emergency aid reaches those that want it most.
No less than 25 individuals died within the southern Haitian coastal city of Petit-Goave after the La Digue river burst its banks because of the hurricane, in response to the city’s mayor Jean Bertrand Subreme.














