City
Epaper

Catastrophic Category 5 Hurricane Melissa makes landfall in Jamaica

By ANI | Updated: October 29, 2025 08:55 IST

Kingston [Jamaica], October 29 : The catastrophic Category 5 hurricane Melissa has made landfall in Jamaica, and the government ...

Open in App

Kingston [Jamaica], October 29 : The catastrophic Category 5 hurricane Melissa has made landfall in Jamaica, and the government has declared the country a disaster area under the Disaster Risk Management Act, Prime Minister of Jamaica, Andrew Holness, said on Wednesday.

"At 12:00 Noon, the centre of hurricane Melissa made landfall on the southwestern coast of Jamaica near New Hope, Westmoreland", he noted in a post on X.

https://x.com/AndrewHolnessJM/status/1983245388304830604

In another post, he said, "Acting on the advice of the Office of Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Management and the Hon. Desmond McKenzie, Minister of Local Government and Community Development, Prime Minister Andrew Holness has declared Jamaica a disaster area under the Disaster Risk Management Act. This declaration takes effect today, October 28, 2025".

He underscored that these orders give the Government tools to continue managing the response to Hurricane Melissa.

https://x.com/AndrewHolnessJM/status/1983304623923573246

UN agencies such as the World Food Programme have started working in order to support the impacted communities.

WFP said that Melissa is the biggest hurricane to hit the Caribbean since Hurricane Beryl in July last year, and the strongest storm seen anywhere in the world this year.

In order to support the communities across the Caribbean who will be impacted by the Hurricane, WFP is working around the clock.

In Haiti, WFP is providing anticipatory e-money distributions to meet urgent humanitarian needs and help people protect their livelihoods ahead of the storm. The distributions will reach approximately 45,000 people and total US$900,000.

In Jamaica, WFP is on the ground, coordinating with the government and the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency, to support with emergency logistics and telecommunications, supply chain, and food and cash assistance as required, the official website of WFP noted.

It added, in Cuba's eastern region, which is most at risk, WFP and the government have prepositioned food supplies to support 275,000 people for up to 60 days.

In the Dominican Republic, more than 4,000 vulnerable households in flood-prone areas will receive cash to prepare for the storm and reduce the impact on household food security. If needed, emergency food assistance will be activated in the southwestern provinces to reach up to 6,000 families with ready-to-eat meals for five days and dry rations for 15 days, WFP said.

Hurricane Melissa is a ferocious Category 5 storm spinning about 150 miles southwest of Kingston, Jamaica, with sustained winds of 175 mph. It is one of the most intense hurricanes ever recorded in the Atlantic Ocean, CNN said in its report.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsWomen’s World Cup: Wolvaardt’s ton, Kapp’s fifer power South Africa to victory over England, into final

NationalNational Unity Day: Inmates at Rajasthan’s Shyalwas Jail create map of India

Entertainment"Just hard work, blood, sweat and tears": Abhishek Bachchan rejects claim of buying Filmfare Award, slams X user for "tarnishing" hard work

National‘Even fire god is angry’: Hanuman Beniwal targets Rajasthan CM

NationalRahul Gandhi’s remark an affront to ‘Chhathi Maiya’, not just PM Modi, says Amit Shah

International Realted Stories

InternationalSouth Korea, US reach agreement on trade deal

InternationalFlorida moves to ban H-1B visas across state universities

International"Will conduct strikes": Pak Defence Min warns Taliban "to push them back to caves"

InternationalTrump says he expects 'great deal' with China ahead of talks with Xi

International"Where culture meets couture": Australian First Nations fashion takes centre stage in Delhi