The U.S. Department of State said on Wednesday that it will be deploying emergency teams to Caribbean countries that were slammed by Hurricane Melissa this week.
The State Department said its teams will work with “affected countries and local communities to determine what assistance is needed and with interagency, international, and U.S. military partners to coordinate emergency response efforts.”
While the post did not specify which countries the response team would be deployed to, Hurricane Melissa made landfall in Jamaica on Tuesday as a catastrophic Category 5 storm. The storm also slammed eastern Cuba as a major hurricane earlier on Wednesday, and it’s currently located in a small strip of water between Cuba and the Bahamas.
Jamaican officials reported complications in assessing the damage, while the National Hurricane Center said the local government had lifted the tropical storm warning.
“There’s a total communication blackout on that side,” Richard Thompson, acting director general of Jamaica’s Office of Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Management, told the Nationwide News Network. More than half a million customers were without power late Tuesday.
“It is safe to say that our shelters have seen increased numbers. We also notice there are communities where residents have created makeshift shelters [and], in most cases, we were able to get limited supplies to those persons within those shelters,” he said.
Jamaica’s mountains, it noted, pose an increase in the “risk of flash floods, major landslides, and infrastructure damage,” according to a news release. Due to the risk of floods and landslides combined with storm surge flooding, the U.N. agency said it will be difficult to transport humanitarian staff and aid into the country, so alternative landing strips will be used.







