Three weeks after Hurricane Melissa tore through the Caribbean, the storm’s aftermath continues to derail the education of nearly 477,000 children across Cuba, Haiti, and Jamaica.
Significant damage to infrastructure has forced schools to remain closed or operate at severely reduced capacity. Thousands of students currently lack access to classrooms, while others are attempting to learn in temporary makeshift facilities that often lack basic amenities.
Urgent Aid and Rehabilitation Efforts
In response to the crisis, international aid agencies are collaborating with local governments to restore access to education. The primary focus involves repairing damaged school buildings and delivering essential learning materials to the hardest-hit areas.
Specific recovery operations are currently underway in the three affected nations:
- Cuba: Logistics teams are preparing to deliver educational kits to approximately 21,000 students to help them resume their studies.
- Haiti: Relief efforts have already distributed nearly 3,000 school kits in the Sud and Nippes regions, with further distribution waves planned for the coming days.
- Jamaica: Support teams have provided essential materials and established 100 temporary learning spaces, catering to the needs of 10,000 children.
Broader Impact of the Storm
The educational crisis is just one facet of the devastation caused by Hurricane Melissa. Since striking late last month, the storm has impacted over 5 million people across the three island nations.
The destruction has left a trail of compromised infrastructure, disrupting essential services well beyond the classroom.