IOM / GRENADA HURRICANE BERYL
Download
There is no media available to download.
Share
STORY: IOM / GRENADA HURRICANE BERYL
TRT: 3:30
SOURCE: IOM
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: AUGUST 2024, CARRIACOU, GRENADA
1. Aerial shot, destroyed houses with the Caribbean Sea in the
2. Various shots, pieces of debris and destroyed houses
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Martina Cilkova, Shelter Coordinator, International Organization for Migration (IOM):
“We started at the beginning of July delivering non-food items, mostly tarpaulins but also solar lamps and other small equipment. Hundreds of that were delivered by our partners in the field.”
4. Aerial shot, Anthony’s lifelong home
5. Wide shot, debris of Anthony’s home
6. SOUNDIBTE (English) Anthony St Hilaire:
‘At first winds start blowing, and then we will cut everything shut tight and then the see rises now and then it is blooming on to the windows and the door. We had us to open the one to load with the pressure wind that coming through and the force of the water. So we had to have somewhere to come through.”
7. Wide shot, Anthony walking through the remains of his home
8. Wide shot, Anthony’s bed on wall-less home
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Anthony St Hilaire:
“It was not easy; one guy called me and told me everything is cleaned up here. I came and I almost cried but do not worry about it, it is material, we have life.”
10. Wide shot, IOM staff talks to Anthony
11. Aerial shot, destroyed houses
12. SOUNDBITE (English) Ryan Jackson, Volunteer from United Kingdom:
“For the past two weeks, what we have been doing is, because Carriacou has a very long aging population they cannot clear up their houses themselves. So we have teams of guys from Carriacou who are moving everything out, dismantling, and getting ready for the new roof and materials.”
13. Aerial shot, destroyed houses
14. Various shots, volunteers cleaning up debris
15. SOUNDBITE (English) Martina Cilkova, Shelter Coordinator, International Organization for Migration (IOM):
“We will be delivering shelter training in various topics so we can help the local population to learn recover and prepare for future disasters which unfortunately hit this region very often”.
16. Various shots, people clearing up debris
Volunteers from near and far have converged on Carriacou, a small paradise island in Grenada, to provide assistance and a glimmer of hope to the residents devastated by Hurricane Beryl, which hit on 1 July 2024.
This Category 4 hurricane, the most powerful ever recorded in the Atlantic in June, has left the island in ruins, damaging more than 95 per cent of buildings and leaving behind flattened homes, destroyed infrastructure, and a community in desperate need of help.
Among the volunteers is Ryan Jackson, a 50-year-old from London with Grenadian heritage. He came to the island with his wife to support his Grenadian parents, who survived the hurricane. “Because Carriacou has a very long aging population they cannot clear up their houses themselves. So we have teams of guys from Carriacou which are moving everything and getting ready for the new roof and materials,” Jackson remarked, as he worked tirelessly to assist elderly residents clean up the debris from their houses.
The scene in Carriacou is one of complete desolation. Collapsed houses, wrecked police stations, schools, hospitals, and debris-strewn streets all portray a grim picture. The island remains in a state of emergency, with efforts to restore power to remote areas expected to take weeks. The hurricane’s impact was so severe that entire villages were wiped out, leaving many communities still living in shelters or with relatives. Out of the total 857 residential buildings detected in Copernicus satellite imagery, all were somehow damaged. Almost one third (32 per cent) are fully destroyed, one quarter are damaged and the remaining 43 per cent are possibly damaged.
Volunteering has long been a tradition in the Caribbean, a region frequently battered by natural disasters. Volunteers from Trinidad and Tobago, headed by Keon Bowen, have been working tirelessly for the past three weeks. Despite the immense challenges that Carriacou faces, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) has been active in distributing humanitarian assistance in coordination with the Government of Grenada, including tarpaulins, solar lamps, and tents to people whose homes and livelihoods have vanished overnight. The scale of the disaster has overwhelmed local resources. “We started at the beginning of July delivering non-food items, mostly tarpaulins but also solar lamps and other small equipment. Hundreds of that were delivered by our partners in the field. We will also be delivering shelter training in various topics so we can help the local population to learn recover and recover for future disasters which hit this region very often,” said Martina Cilkova, IOM Shelter and Settlement Officer.
Every day, volunteers assist hundreds of people, reflecting the resilience and determination of the Grenadian people. Anthony St. Hilaire, a 66-year-old resident, embodies the spirit of endurance that characterizes the community. Living in the remnants of the toilet of his lifelong home covered by a plastic sheet, he plays his ukulele, the only item he could recover, and states, “We have life; the rest is material.” His words resonate with many who have lost so much but remain committed to rebuilding their lives and communities. “Grenadians endure together and move together.”
The recovery process is expected to be lengthy with many challenges. The Government, Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA), UN agencies, local and international organizations are collaborating to provide essential services, and support rebuilding efforts. However, they face significant challenges in logistics, resource allocation, and rebuilding to withstand future hurricanes, especially with the peak of hurricane season approaching.
The devastation in Grenada is unprecedented. Two months later, while debris has been cleared from the streets, many houses remain roofless or reduced to rubble. Daily life has regained some normalcy, but there is still no electricity. Entire villages were wiped out by storm surge caused by the hurricane, and many communities still live in shelters or with family members.
Yet, amid the chaos, the spirit of volunteerism and community resilience is a ray of hope. Volunteers continue to work diligently, driven by a shared sense of solidarity. As the tourist paradise island slowly rebuilds, the efforts of these volunteers will be remembered as an example of the Caribbean people’s enduring resilience and unity.









