Technical Teams Dispatched As Saint Lucia Experiences Land Slippages, Flooding – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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On Sunday, Saint Lucia’s Department of Infrastructure, Ports, and Transport dispatched technical teams after receiving reports of land slippages and flooding in various areas.

Communications Officer in the Ministry of Infrastructure, Ports, Transport, Physical Development, and Urban Renewal, Miguel Fevrier, said that Senior Minister Stephenson King would issue a statement later.

Fevrier disclosed that technical teams are assessing the situation to take remedial action within the shortest possible time.

In the meantime, he said motorists and residents in areas prone to flooding and landslides are urged to exercise extreme caution as more rains are expected later in the day into Monday morning.

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In addition to flooding and land slippages, the National Emergency Management Organisation (NEMO) disclosed on Sunday that it had received reports of individuals trapped in their homes in the Assou Canal area.

NEMO’s Acting Director Maria Medard told St Lucia Times on Sunday afternoon that emergency responders were trying to assist in evacuating the distressed residents.

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Corinth Secondary, Dame Pearlette Primary To Remain Closed After Heavy Rains – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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The Ministry of Education, Sustainable Development, Innovation, Science, Technology and Vocational Training wishes to inform parents and guardians that based on initial assessments following heavy rains on Sunday November 6th, 2022, the Corinth Secondary and the Dame Pearlette Louisy Primary Schools will remain closed until further notice.

Cleanup of these institutions following the Sunday downpour will begin in earnest, and as such, parents and guardians will be informed through the usual means by the two schools on reopening dates. Instruction at other schools on the island will continue as usual on Monday, November 7th, 20222.

The Ministry encourages all to remain safe and to always be prepared for any eventuality during this hurricane season.

SOURCE: Ministry of Education, Sustainable Development, Innovation, Science, Technology and Vocational Training

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Final Step verjongt

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The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

Jonge generatie neemt het roer over  door Steven Seedo PARAMARIBO — De jongere generatie heeft het stokje overgenomen van de

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Belize District under curfew. City relief efforts underway.

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

Photo: The Sister Cecilia Home for the Elderly

by Khaila Gentle

BELIZE CITY, Thurs. Nov. 3, 2022

During a press conference late Thursday evening, Prime Minister John Briceño announced that a 7:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. curfew would be imposed on the entirety of the Belize District, with the exception of Ambergris Caye and Caye Caulker, from Thursday, November 3, until Sunday, November 6. According to the Prime Minister, the curfew is being imposed in an effort to ensure the safety of life and property. The decision was made following an emergency Cabinet meeting on Thursday.

“The main reason why we want to institute a curfew at night is because certain areas of the city still do not have electricity. And so, to be able to keep things safe, we want to make sure that everyone stays in their home,” he said.

Security forces as well as NEMO personnel and other public officers working under NEMO, personnel from the Department of Immigration, utility company workers, emergency service personnel, employees of the Philip Goldson International Airport, and search and rescue personnel are allowed to move about during curfew hours.

The passage of Hurricane Lisa left much of the Belize District, as well as some other parts of the country, without power. Here in the city, both electricity and water services had been cut off by the time the center of the storm made landfall some ten miles south of the Old Capital, bringing with it winds of 85 miles per hour and winds gusts of up to 95 miles per hour. Those heavy winds left dozens of utility poles leaning, or on the ground; countless power lines sagging or disconnected, or entangled; and even more trees and fences toppled over.

Many homes and commercial buildings also suffered damage due to the harsh onslaught of Lisa’s winds. The Sister Cecilia Home for the Elderly was one of many establishments that lost their roofs during the storm. Their living quarters were left in shambles, but with the help of donations, the Rotary Club of Belize has already begun to assist in the repair of the building.

It is expected that electricity services will be fully restored across the country by Sunday, with at least 50% of Belize City expected to have electricity by the end of Thursday.

According to Prime Minister Briceño, no lives were lost during the storm. There was, however, severe damage to property, which has left some two hundred persons in shelters. Localized flooding was seen along the coast of Belize City as well as in Belama Phase 4, Belama Phase 5, Ladyville, Vista Del Mar, and surrounding neighborhoods, with some persons reporting water levels of about three feet inside their homes.

In response to the current situation, Hon. Briceño is asking for the cooperation of everyone, especially those in affected areas.

“Rest assured; Government is responding to recovery efforts. Already teams of workers are out in the affected areas assessing and addressing the urgent humanitarian assistance [needed], including getting food and water to those most in need,” he said.

The Belize City Council, along with the Belize Defense Force and numerous other social partners have already begun a massive cleanup campaign across the Belize City.

According to NEMO Coordinator, Colonel Shelton Defour, the vast majority of those who have been severely impacted by Hurricane Lisa can expect to have some degree of relief by the start of this weekend. Already, NEMO has begun issuing food packs, tarps, and mattresses, among other items.

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COP 27 looms large in wake of Hurricane Lisa

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

BELIZE CITY, Thurs. Nov. 3, 2022

From Sunday, November 6, to Friday, November 18, the 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference (UNFCCC) will be held in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt — just days after Hurricane Lisa battered portions of Belize on November 2, which is seen as just one more indication that climate change is intensifying the threats faced, particularly by low-lying developing countries such as Belize, during the Atlantic Hurricane Season. This is exactly the point that countries in the region and other low-lying countries, many of which are the least equipped financially to recover from the economic blows caused by these storms, will be trying to make at the two-week conference, COP27, where they will discuss how to achieve the global climate goals as agreed upon under the Kyoto Protocol and Paris Agreement. What countries such as Belize will once again be demanding, therefore is climate justice and adequate climate finance — especially since it’s been noted that the countries being most impacted by climate change (like Belize) are not the countries which contributed most to global warming through greenhouse gas emissions (wealthier, more industrialized nations such as the United States).

It is a point that is more poignant just days after the landfall of Hurricane Lisa along Belize’s coast. The country is now scrambling to regain economic footing after extensive damage of public infrastructure and private property. Today, Prime Minister John Briceno during a press conference on the impact of Hurricane Lisa, spoke on the importance of the provision of climate finance for vulnerable countries like Belize.

“Many of these developed countries don’t feel what we are going through,” Prime Minister Briceno said. He noted that in comparison to developed countries, when disasters hit developing states like Belize, the impact on the nation’s economic development is monumentally more severe.

“That is why we have been calling out to the international community, that they need to do their part. We are doing our part to protect the planet, to protect the environment, to try to hold down the increase in temperature, but yet they are not doing their part; they have damaged their environment to be able to grow their economies. So now it’s their turn now to pay us for the work that we have been doing.” PM Briceno said.

The CEO of the Ministry of Sustainable Development and Disaster Risk Management, Dr. Kenrick Williams, expressed similar sentiments during NEMO’s press conference yesterday morning:

“If you compare the economic implications of Hurricane Lisa on Belize compared to a storm on Miami, they’re significantly different, because the US can position monies, investments in responding to those storms. Countries like ours struggle and suffer. We were on very good economic trend over the last few months, and this is going to significantly impact our country. We’re going to have to spend resources to try to respond to this storm – not just the financial implications. There are social implications on our people. There’s a setback that this will cause our people. And again, this is the result of the changing climate that is not the culpability of our country, or one of two countries, but on the global economy. So countries like Belize have to go out there and defend and say, ‘listen, we are being impacted and the impact that we receive is not on scale to the other countries, so we have to ensure that in times like this we have the resources to be able to respond to support our people,” he said.

Dr. Williams also highlighted the fact that human-caused climate change is no longer a question of debate — but a reality that we are experiencing every day. He said that the delegation from Belize and representatives from across the Caribbean will lobby at COP27 to try to secure the climate financing needed for the region.

In September 2022, the global surface temperature was recorded at 0.88°C (1.58°F) above the 20th century average of 15.0°C (59.0°F), according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) National Centers For Environmental Information. We have seen extreme and, in some instances, unprecedented weather events this year so far, most recently the formation of tropical cyclones that have become named storms at the tail end of the Atlantic Hurricane Season. One of those storms, Hurricane Lisa, made landfall in Belize this week.

Notably as well, the islands of the Caribbean and Africa recorded the 6th warmest September in history, according to NOAA records. In North America, the warmest September in history was recorded, while Europe had its coolest weather in the period immediately following a summer of extreme heat.

Caribbean leaders, are hoping that the upcoming conference will lead to the mobilization of billions of dollars needed to make economies across the world green while building resilience against the impacts of climate change.

The UNFCCC’s Standing Committee on Finance has published reports based on data which the committee says was derived from the “experience of countries, multilateral development banks, climate funds and the financial community at large.”

The two-week COP 27 will again provide an opportunity for world leaders, experts, and climate activists to come together and chart a part forward for our global future, given the realities of the changing climate.

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CitCo leads 3-day cleanup campaign in Belize City

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

Photo: Mayor Wagner and BDF Personnel on the ground

BELIZE CITY, Fri. Nov. 4, 2022

The landfall of Hurricane Lisa in Belize on Wednesday, November 2, has left in its wake various forms of wreckage— including tons of debris strewn over streets and public areas — in various parts of the city. The storm’s impact includes scores of collapsed homes, broken power lines, zinc torn from rooftops, and thick mud. In a press conference hosted by the Government of Belize on Thursday, November 3, 2022, Mayor Bernard Wagner said that he has visited multiple areas in Belize City, including Port Loyola, Belama and Krooman Lagoon, which have been severely affected, and that the Cabinet has decided to support the council with additional resources to fast-track the cleaning of Belize City.

The Belize City Council and its City Emergency Management Organization (CEMO) Unit will be partnering with the Government of Belize, the National Emergency Management Organization, the Ministry of Infrastructure Development and Housing, and other entities to launch a robust 3-day cleanup campaign within Belize City in order to speed up the recovery process and restore a sense of normalcy for residents. In addition to these entities, active partners in this large cleanup campaign will include the Belize Waste Control, the Department of the Environment, the Belize Defense Force, Belize Fire Department, Belize Coast Guard, CISCO Construction, RJB Construction, Imer Hernandez Construction, Teichroeb & Sons Ltd., GEL Quarry Co. Ltd., the Orange Walk Town Council and other supporting municipalities, A&N Construction, and Belize Roadway Construction Ltd. Each partner contributed manpower and equipment, and in total there will be a team of approximately 500 personnel, equipped with a host of trucks, backhoes and chainsaws, involved in the cleanup. The campaign is set to start on Friday, November 4, and continue until Sunday, November 6.

This morning, at the launch of the cleanup campaign, Mayor Bernard Wagner, Mayor of Belize City and chairman of the City Emergency Management Organization, told Amandala, “We will be spread all over the city to really ensure we see the results we’re looking for in service to our affected residents. Having this collaboration with all of these stakeholders means more muscle on the ground, and the residents have been enthusiastic about the launch of the campaign.” According to Mayor Wagner, the large team has been strategically split up into zones to ensure that every area of the city sees improvements. After discussions with the Department of the Environment, the council is also asking residents to separate solid waste from vegetation for the cleaning crews to collect. The cleaning crews will be working with consideration of the curfew hours of 6:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. for the duration of the campaign.

In addition to Mayor Bernard Wagner; Fort George area representative Hon. Henry Charles Usher; Mayor of Orange Walk Town, Ladrick Sheppard; and Belize City Councillors Kaya Cattouse, Deannie Requena and Edmund Kwan were present at the launch of the cleanup campaign.

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Lisa wrecks Belize City

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

BELIZE CITY. Fri. Nov. 4, 2022

Hurricane Lisa was the storm that came out of nowhere. Many Belizeans, many of whom were very aware that hurricanes have not historically hit the country in November, the last month of the Atlantic Hurricane Season, which runs from June 1 to November 30, were no longer monitoring activity in the Atlantic. And then word came that there was a disturbance that was heading in this direction. Not too long after, it became clear that almost all possible trajectories had the storm making landfall in some part of Belize.

According to projections, the most likely location of landfall would be somewhere near Dangriga. All meteorological updates were indicating that the storm was moving at about 14 or 15 miles per hour, and although it was a tropical storm it would likely become a hurricane just before hitting Belize. But there were some shifts that took place that caught some Belizeans off-guard. Gradually, it appeared, the path of the storm was inching upward — farther from Dangriga and closer to Belize City — the coast, specifically. Some observers on Tuesday were speculating that this movement was placing Belize City and its coast possibly in the right front quadrant of the storm, which would be subjected to the strongest winds and storm surge. It has been noted that the strongest side of a hurricane, depending on the direction in which the storm is moving, is typically the right side — known as the “dirty side”, where there is a higher likelihood of storm surge and even tornadoes, and where more intense wind gusts and heavier rain bands are likely to occur.

And Belizeans who were monitoring the upward tilt in the storm’s movement, particularly on Tuesday evening of this week, saw Belize City being an increasingly shorter distance away from the area of landfall and also possibly being on the “dirty side”. Many Belizeans, however, had not been anticipating the storm to hit so close to the city. Something else that caught Belizeans off guard was the time of the landfall. Most Belizeans had read or heard that the storm would be hitting the country on Wednesday night — possibly at 8:00. The Prime Minister had declared a state of emergency on Wednesday, and Belizeans were told that only essential services would be allowed to operate and that buses would stop running at 10:00 a.m.

Many Belizeans were shocked, however, when very strong winds started pummeling the city early on Wednesday afternoon. At around 3:20 p.m. on Wednesday, November 2, the storm made landfall about 10 miles from Belize City, according to the experts at the National Meteorological Services in Belize. Wind speeds of about 85 miles per hour began battering the country, with higher gusts of up to 95 miles per hour. Fortunately, so far it appears that no lives were lost as a result of this storm, but Belize City was severely impacted.

Residents in various parts of the city reported seeing lamp posts falling and water rising by several feet and entering a number of homes. Scores of roofs in various parts of the city were torn off, and by the end of the storm, there were downed trees, entangled electrical wires, and zinc roofs strewn over streets and in yards. It was also reported by some residents that a few houses in the city had collapsed, and some Belize City residents have remarked that the storm had seemed stronger than a Cat 1 hurricane.

Significant damage to the utility infrastructure was also recorded. Water services, which were interrupted on Wednesday afternoon, have reportedly been restored, but water pressure in certain parts of the country remains extremely low.

Notably, individual experiences during the storm varied. Andrew Bethran, whose mother’s home in the Port Loyola area, which was seen as a sort of historical landmark to the community before it collapsed during the storm, told AMANDALA, “This house from when I was a young boy, from when I was 3 years old to now, I am 48 years old and this house is here. So, God was holding it up. Nature came and nature took it down. It’s sad, because although it was an old house, people saw it as a home where they could come stay in and sleep and they won’t be getting wet and beat on, but now this is gone… It’s a loss, and I believe it’s not only me who went through this. You have a lot of people who went through this…. If the system could come and assist my old lady, it’ll be a privilege for me.. This was a landmark for the area. A lot of people know this house… This house was here since I was 3 years old — before the drain and sidewalk, all of those things got built, this house was here. This house is the second house to be on this boulevard.”

Marie Lewis, however, a Justice of the Peace, who experienced Hurricane Hattie in 1961, said that she and her husband slept through Lisa’s wrath.

“In 1961, I was on the road with two babies, and I went through an experience on Faber’s Road with 7 feet of water in my house. I had two kids, my mother was pregnant, my sister was pregnant, and the entire Rhamdas family in my home [and] when we looked, 7 feet of water was in the house. We prayed and the water went down. When I heard about Lisa and that it was coming east, I said this would be a lot of water because easterly winds bring a lot of high tides; and when I heard it coming to this side, I said it’s going down the south side, and we won’t get any water. But with Lisa, it gave me a little shake, but it wasn’t that bad. We expected more than that, the way they were talking about the mileage it was going. We saw a lot of houses falling. We saw the house across the street, their [roof] came off and my son and daughter’s houses [roof] fell up, but praise God, me and my husband still alive… I wasn’t scared of it because I went through ’61 and it wasn’t [the same]. ’61 was worse than this. My daughter wanted to take me to their house, and I said I am not leaving out from my house. [I] and my husband slept in our bed and we slept until this morning,” she said.

At this time, 278 persons remain in shelters across the country. Those persons staying at school shelters are expected to be relocated as soon as possible, to allow for the reopening of schools on Monday. NEMO and GoB personnel are reportedly working on the execution of this transfer.

The Prime Minister, John Briceno, in his remarks during a press conference held yesterday evening, called for the collective teamwork of all Belizeans to aid in the recovery and rebuilding of the country. He said that at this time, getting food and water to those affected, and the most vulnerable in our communities, is the primary task. The clean-up across the country will continue, with the Belize City Council announcing that the Cabinet was providing additional resources so that it can launch a 3-day cleanup campaign (which started today) that will reportedly involve a number of agencies and a total of approximately 500 personnel. Active partners in this cleanup campaign will include the Belize Waste Control, the Department of the Environment, the Belize Defense Force, Belize Fire Department, Belize Coast Guard, CISCO Construction, RJB Construction, Imer Hernandez Construction, Teichroeb & Sons Ltd., GEL Quarry Co. Ltd.,, the Orange Walk Town Council and other supporting municipalities, A&N Construction and Belize Roadway Construction Ltd. According to Mayor Bernard Wagner, the team will be split into zones to ensure that recovery work is done in all portions of the city. Briceno also noted at the press conference that 6 private contractors have offered their equipment free of cost to aid in the efforts. Civil servants and members of the security forces will also be involved in the effort.

Various portions of Belize City remain without electricity and are experiencing very low water pressure. The electricity is expected to be fully restored by Sunday, according to the PM. Until then, a curfew between 7:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. will be in place across the Belize District — excluding Ambergris Caye and Caye Caulker.

As mentioned, schools are to be reopened on Monday, and all government offices are expected to be reopened by then as well. At this time, Belize City remains the area of the country that is in most need of recovery efforts, according to the PM.

Notably, it is being reported that comparatively mild effects of the storm were felt in Dangriga, where Hurricane Lisa had been projected to make landfall.

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