UK to provide £2.5m in support to Jamaica after hurricane

3 hours ago 4

Fiona Nimoni and

Yasmin Malik

EPA A man in a green hoodie walks past a damaged property in Jamaica EPA

The UK will provide £2.5m in emergency humanitarian funding to Jamaica, the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) has announced.

UK relief supplies and technical experts have also been deployed to assist with the disaster response and recovery from the devastation caused by Hurricane Melissa.

Speaking during Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday, Sir Keir Starmer told the Commons: "The scenes of destruction emerging from Jamaica are truly shocking."

The £2.5m funding will go towards delivering emergency supplies such as shelter kits, water filters and blankets, according to the FCDO.

The PM also told MPs that naval vessel HMS Trent had been "pre-positioned in the region" to provide support.

As many as 8,000 Britons are understood to be in Jamaica and the FCDO has urged them to register their presence to receive updates on the hurricane.

A specialist FCDO team has travelled to Miami to provide consular assistance to affected British nationals

Hurricane Melissa - now a category three storm and headed towards the Bahamas - first hit Jamaica's southern coast with maximum sustained winds of 295km/h (185mph) - the strongest on Earth so far this year.

Those speeds were above those of Hurricane Katrina in 2005 , one of the worst storms in history.

With communications crippled, the true scale of the disaster remains unknown.

Jamaica's Prime Minister Andrew Holness declared the island a "disaster area" on Tuesday, warning of "devastating impacts" and "significant damage" to hospitals, homes and businesses.

Three-quarters of the country had no electricity overnight and many parts of Jamaica's western side are under water, with homes destroyed by strong winds after the hurricane tore across the island with catastrophic force.

Satellite image showing Hurricane Melissa approaching Jamaica in the Caribbean. The storm’s eye is clearly visible, surrounded by dense white cloud bands. Jamaica is labelled near the centre, with Cuba to the northwest and Haiti to the northeast.

Families and friends in the UK have faced difficulty contacting Britons in Jamaica.

Rayanne Walters, 26, from London, says her messages have not been delivered to her friend in Jamaica.

"We tried phoning him. After a few minutes - it cuts off.

"I've been really, really sad and feel heartbroken. I just really want to know my friends are okay. It's one tick on all the phones," she told the BBC.

Yvonne Williams, a teacher from Leeds, has also been unable to contact her sister.

She said: "Ever since the storm made landfall at around 5pm I haven't been able to get in touch with my sister

"I kept waking up periodically through the night to try and get through."

While Melissa has now cleared Jamaica, there will still be some thunderstorms across the island.

The National Hurricane Center warns that an additional 8-15cm (3-6in) of rain is possible in parts, with up to 76cm over mountainous areas.

Certain areas will remain flooded and there is a risk of ongoing flash flooding and numerous landslides around mountainous regions that could continue into Wednesday night.

Graphic explaining the Saffir-Simpson scale of hurricane categories. Category one has peak sustained wind speeds of 74 miles per hour and can cause minor damage and potential power outages; category two above 96 miles per hour and can cause extensive damage to property; category three above 111 miles per hour and even well-built homes will sustain major damage; category four above 130 miles per hour and will cause severe damage to well-build homes; and category five has wind speeds above 157 miles per hour and will destroy many buildings as well as cutting off communities.

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