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Grenada minister tells UN: hurricane-devastated Islands need anything for `a human being to survive’

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Associated Press

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The minister for the two islands in Grenada that Hurricane Beryl first slammed into with catastrophic winds had a simple message for U.N. and other humanitarian officials who asked what was needed: “Anything that would allow a human being to survive.” Tevin Andrews, who was in the devastated island of Carriacou where Beryl first made landfall Monday as the earliest category 4 storm in the Atlantic, also said Friday when asked whether there was flat space for humanitarian workers to set up tents: “The whole island is flat.” Simon Springett, the top U.N. humanitarian official for the eastern Caribbean and Barbados, said he didn’t want to sound over-dramatic, “but the islands were really dramatically, catastrophically, catastrophically hit.”

Article Topic Follows: AP National News

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Associated Press

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