The following is a transcript of a clip the Prime Minister
recorded today, following the COBR meeting she chaired on Hurricane
Irma.
BBC: Prime Minister, you’ll be aware that some people have
criticised you for not being swift enough in your response to the
crisis in the Caribbean. What was agreed at the COBR meeting
today about how you’ll step up efforts?
I’ve just chaired the Government’s emergency committee COBR,
looking at the further support we can provide to the British
Overseas Territories in the Caribbean with these terrible
hurricanes and the devastating impact they’re having.
I heard direct from Governors in the region including the
Governor of the British Virgin Islands, where Hurricane Irma, the
eye of the hurricane ran directly through the capital of the
British Virgin Islands.
I also heard about the work that RFA Mounts Bay and the troops
and military personnel on Mounts Bay have undertaken already and
will be doing in the future.
In Anguilla they have made the airfield serviceable, they have
restored power to the hospital, they have rebuilt emergency
shelters. Our military personnel, our troops, have been working
around the clock there and we owe them a great debt of gratitude.
Those troops from RFA Mounts Bay are now assisting the Governor
of the British Virgin Islands who has declared a state of
emergency there. They are also working to ensure that the
airfield there is serviceable so that military aircraft can be
flown in with further supplies.
Every effort is being made to ensure that as much as possible can
be done in advance of Hurricane Jose which is the next hurricane
reaching that area.
At the COBR, I also heard directly from our Consul-General in
Miami about the support that is being given to British nationals
living in Florida and also British tourists in Florida, and we
are of course working with the US authorities to ensure that
every support is available and everything can be done before
Hurricane Irma reaches Florida.
And we are also working in the region, in the Caribbean,
internationally with other partners – with the French and with
the Dutch – and we are responding to a French request that we
provide British military support to their efforts.
But I also know that many families are finding it very difficult
to find information and hear from and contact loved ones in the
region. The Foreign Office has set up a specific hotline that
people can contact to get information and support. And I would
encourage anybody who is worried about families in the region to
contact that Foreign Office hotline.