Bermuda to support UK hurricane relief efforts in the Caribbean
Royal Bermuda Regiment and Bermuda police officers will deploy to the Caribbean to support the UK’s efforts in the wake of Hurricane Irma.
A contingent of the Royal Bermuda Regiment and Bermuda Police officers will deploy to support the UK’s efforts in the Caribbean Overseas Territories devastated by Hurricane Irma.
The contingent is ready to go with arrangements being made for deployment via UK military airlift. They will deploy to whichever Overseas Territory has most operational need. Bermuda police are expected to join UK and Cayman Islands police already supporting law and order in the British Virgin Islands. Regiment soldiers will be embedded with the 24 Commando Engineer Group where they will put their specialist Hurricane response skills to best use.
Governor John Rankin said:
I am pleased that the Royal Bermuda Regiment and the Bermuda Police Service will play this role in providing support to those Overseas Territories which have been so badly affected by Hurricane Irma. Both Services of course have experience of hurricane response in Bermuda and that experience will I am sure be put to good use in helping our neighbours in the Caribbean yet again.
This is the 7th time the Regiment has been called upon to assist its Caribbean neighbours with Disaster relief, having deployed most recently to the Turks and Caicos in 2008, Grenada in 2005 and the Cayman Islands in 2004.
On this occasion the Royal Bermuda Regiment will join the huge UK effort including over 700 troops and 50 police officers to support the islands’ recovery from the devastating effects of Hurricane Irma. RFA Mounts Bay was on hand to provide immediate support and HMS Ocean will arrive in the coming days with further relief stores. In the meantime several flights a day have been supplying shelter, sanitation, food and water as well as medics and other experts from the UK.