Aiding rebuilding efforts after Hurricane Beryl – Carib Vibe Radio
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Aiding rebuilding efforts after Hurricane Beryl

UN Women says it has been on the ground and working to ensure that women are fully integrated into recovery efforts, as Caribbean nations begin to rebuild after Hurricane Beryl particularly ravaged the islands of the Grenadines islands of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, and Grenada.

UN Women said over the weekend that when Hurricane Beryl tore through the Caribbean in early summer, it left a trail of destroyed homes, unpassable roads and ruined local infrastructure.

โ€œAs climate change raises global temperatures, hurricanes will likely become more intense in the region, as storms feed on warm waters at the ocean surface,โ€ UN Women warned.

UN Women said its response to Hurricane Beryl in Grenada, Carriacou, St. Vincent, and the Grenadine islands โ€” Union Island and Bequia โ€” includes providing psychosocial support to impacted people, injecting cash into the local economy to empower women, ensuring protection of women and girls in shelters, and distributing essential hygiene and dignity items for women and girls through aid packages.

โ€œRelying first on local and women-owned businesses has been a key strategy of UN Womenโ€™s response to disasters,โ€ said Tonni Brodber, Representative of UN Womenโ€™s Caribbean Multi-Country Office. โ€œThis helps reinvigorate local economies and directly supports small and medium enterprise owners as they restore their livelihoods.โ€

Marslyn Lewis, the owner of Marslynโ€™s All-Natural Sea Moss Solutions, a local business in St. Vincent and the Grenadines that produces sea moss-based health and cosmetic products, said: โ€œI know we are strong and resilient people, very independent-minded, and I know in times of trouble, that is when we are most strong.โ€

UN Women said Hurricane Berylโ€™s destruction of sea moss farms in the Grenadines has severely impacted Lewisโ€™ business, leaving her with no product to sell and no hope of income for at least six months, until new sea moss seedlings can mature.

UN Women said it worked with Lewis to buy the remainder of her stock for inclusion in aid packages delivered to those in need.

In Bequia, UN Women said women lost businesses that were more than just jobsโ€”they represented yearsโ€™ worth of effort and sacrifice.

โ€œBefore the hurricane I was doing training in disaster management and resilience, and it still did not prepare me for Beryl,โ€ said Ronita Ollivierre, owner of the local sea moss cultivator and supplier Ocean Remedies. โ€œIn a couple hours, wind just took the farm, the drying station, it is just gone. People might think itโ€™s material things and you can get it back, but it took three years to get here, and how are you going to get it back?โ€

UN Women said it has been working closely with local authorities and community leaders to ensure that the Beryl response addresses the specific needs of women, who are often disproportionately affected by disasters.

This approach stems from UN Womenโ€™s Build Back Equal (BBE) program, funded by the Government of Canada, โ€œwhich aims to not only restore what was lost but also to create more equitable and resilient communities in the process,โ€ UN Women said.

It said the BBE program was implemented with the aim of contributing to womenโ€™s economic resilience in the Eastern Caribbean by taking a comprehensive approach to addressing the barriers that women face to economic empowerment and providing increased sustainable opportunities for womenโ€™s economic growth.

With the impact of Beryl on many women-owned businesses, UN Women said the program aims to equip business owners with the skills and financing to grow their businesses through environmentally friendly and climate- and shock-resilient innovation.

As part of the BBE program, UN Women said it is supporting the development of referral and coordination systems to address gender-based violence, and to ensure that they are maintained amid the crisis recovery efforts.

Nadina Williams, a government social worker on the island of Carriacou, worked closely with UN Women to provide relief, despite her own home being impacted by the hurricane.

UN Women said Williams and others engaged tirelessly to direct relief efforts and support shelters and childcare centers, ensuring that the needs of the most vulnerable were met.

โ€œThe impact of UN Women with regards to us here on the sister isle is the attention to detail, the quickness, and the urgency in terms of how the team has responded,โ€ said Williams, specially commending UN Women for its coordination of the local BBE program in Grenada.

Williams, who is also a representative of the BBE National Projectโ€™s Steering Committee, noted that recipients were โ€œreally thrilled even to get the smallest thing, such as a bottle of lotion,โ€ in aid packages.

โ€œI know our women felt valued,โ€ she added.

UN Women said its efforts to understand and respond to the gendered impacts of disasters are part of a long-standing commitment to ensuring that no one is left behind in the recovery process.

It said the recent Small Island Developing States (SIDS) conference and Gender Equality Forum underscored the vulnerability of island nations to climate change and disasters, and the need for targeted interventions that address these unique challenges.

In Berylโ€™s aftermath, UN Women said the importance of this work has become โ€œeven more evident, especially for entrepreneurs like Lewis, who attended the SIDS conference herself.โ€

โ€œEmotional support is very important at this point, because I have to be strong for not only myself but for my siblings and son,โ€ Lewis said.

โ€œWe just need to be there for each other and support each other through this,โ€ she added. โ€œIt is no longer โ€˜me and mine and yours.โ€™โ€

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