Black River Left in Ruins: 90% of Roofs Gone, Hospital Destroyed, Electricity Grid Wiped Out — “We Got a Big Blow, But Jamaica Will Rebuild,” Says PM Holness

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Black River, St Elizabeth — Once a picturesque coastal town rich in heritage and history, Black River now stands in silence — a ghostly shell of what it was just days ago. Nearly 90% of roofs have been ripped away, the Black River Hospital lies in ruins, and centuries-old buildings have been flattened as Hurricane Melissa carved an unrelenting path of destruction across Jamaica’s south coast. The devastation has made St Elizabeth the epicenter of what Prime Minister Andrew Holness described as “a total wipeout of modern living conveniences.”

During a visit to the parish on Wednesday, Holness — accompanied by Member of Parliament Floyd Green, Superintendent Coleridge Minto, and Mayor Richard Solomon — painted a grim picture of the situation on the ground. “The entire infrastructure and everything needed for the convenience of modern living is destroyed here in Black River,” he said. “But the people here are strong, resilient, and positive in outlook. The Government intends to complement that with bringing in the necessary emergency relief.”

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Clearing roadways to allow supplies to reach supermarkets and communities remains the first order of business, Holness noted. He revealed that the Government, in collaboration with ODPEM and other agencies, has already mobilised emergency teams to begin relief operations. “From Treasure Beach to Black River, the destruction is total — roofs gone, buildings destroyed, the electricity grid wiped out. Black River is ground zero,” he declared.

Mayor Solomon confirmed that the parish’s disaster response resources have been completely depleted. “Our relief supplies were totally wiped out. The container we had in storage is gone, and the building structure that housed our supplies has been destroyed,” he lamented. Solomon revealed that floodwaters rose up to 16 feet during Melissa’s passage, leaving emergency vehicles and ambulances submerged and immobile. “We are in need of mobility and humanitarian aid to begin a proper assessment and deliver relief,” he said, adding that local contractors and JPS crews are now assisting in road clearance and power restoration.

As the waters recede, the scale of Black River’s suffering becomes clearer. Churches, courthouses, and heritage buildings — once the pride of the parish — now lie in rubble. Yet amid the ruins, one sentiment resonates across the battered south coast: resilience. “The recovery is not beyond us,” Holness assured. “We got a big blow, but Jamaica will rebuild — starting right here in Black River.”

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