Crisis on Top of Crisis: Haiti After Hurricane Melissa

December 24, 2025
- by: Maryanne Buechner and Gessika Thomas

How UNICEF helped Haiti prepare for the storm, bringing aid to vulnerable children and families, and the need to step up support to assist with recovery, build resilience and strengthen services as the country remains mired in a polycrisis.

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On Oct. 29, 2025, Hurricane Melissa dealt a terrible blow to Petit-Goâve, a coastal town in Haiti's Ouest department a few dozen miles southwest of Port-au-Prince.

In the days following the storm, one of the Atlantic's strongest in recorded history, the town's landscape was desolate, the silence broken only by the sound of footsteps in mud and the splashing of puddles. The smell of wet soil mingled with that of debris. 

Streets once bustling with life were blanketed with silt and rubble, homes and cars buried beneath. Waterlogged schoolbooks, soaked uniforms, children’s toys and battered cookware were scattered everywhere. 

A young girl sits by what remains of a home destroyed by Hurricane Melissa in Petit-Goâve, Haiti.
Petit-Goâve, a coastal town in Haiti's Ouest department, suffered major damage when Hurricane Melissa swept through in October 2025. © UNICEF Haïti/2025/Joseph 

Other parts of Haiti's southern regions were also hard hit — communities already weakened by previous disasters in the South, Nippes, Grand’Anse and South-East departments. 

In Petit-Goâve, the La Digue River flooded, destroying homes and bridges, killing 43 people including several children, leaving dozens missing and forcing families to take cover in makeshift shelters.

“The water rose at one in the morning, when everyone was asleep," recalled Viguens, 35, of Petit-Goâve. "We didn’t have time to save anything. I lost my father, my brother and three of my nieces. I survived by escaping through a window. I feel guilty for still being here.”

Hurricane Melissa has deepened an already extremely fragile situation in Haiti, where millions of children have long lived in fear, displacement and deprivation. “The burden on Haiti’s children keeps growing heavier," said Geeta Narayan, UNICEF Representative in Haiti.

UNICEF staff assess the damage caused by Hurricane Melissa in Petit-Goâve, where houses and vehicles lie buried under thick layers of mud.
UNICEF staff assess damage caused by Hurricane Melissa in Petit-Goâve, where houses and vehicles lie buried under thick layers of mud. © UNICEF Haïti/2025/Joseph 

While assisting in the island nation’s recovery from the hurricane, UNICEF is also focused on helping communities build resilience to future shocks — all while continuing to address other chronic needs.

"As families try to rebuild their lives, we must act urgently and in solidarity to provide them with protection, comfort and access to essential services," Narayan said. "UNICEF will remain on the ground, alongside the people of Haiti, to help children overcome this ordeal and find the strength to move forward.” 

Related: Reaching Children With the Greatest Needs — Wherever They Are

Preparing for Hurricane Melissa: Preventive action to limit the damage 

UNICEF was well-positioned to take action ahead of Hurricane Melissa, having maintained a steady presence in Haiti, working with local partners to provide humanitarian assistance to children and families in need since 1983

As the storm approached, UNICEF supported emergency preparedness measures, reducing risks for vulnerable children and families. 

In southern Haiti, two women leave a a UNICEF hurricane aid distribution point carrying water buckets and other items.
UNICEF worked with Haiti's Civil Protection unit to distribute hygiene kits to families in communities affected by Hurricane Melissa. © UNICEF/UNI902464/Joseph

In coordination with national authorities and local partners, UNICEF pre-positioned essential supplies, such as hygiene kits, water purifiers and containers and medical supplies, and shared early warning messages with communities. UNICEF also provided cash to vulnerable households.

As Cyclone Melissa swept across the country, UNICEF teams remained on the ground alongside the Haitian government and humanitarian partners to quickly assess and coordinate the response across the water, health, hygiene, nutrition and child protection sectors.

Within two weeks, training and capacity-building sessions were underway with local authorities and partners to support further interventions and planning around emergency health management, cholera prevention, psychosocial support and the coordination of rapid community-level needs assessments.

"I have seen a lot of emergencies in my work with UNICEF — and the impact of this one has been really astonishing — but it could've been a lot worse if we hadn't prepared," said Alexandra Blason, UNICEF Emergency Regional Advisor in Latin America and the Caribbean.

Learn more about UNICEF's focus on preparedness, building resilience and other priorities for humanitarian action in 2026 in Haiti and around the world

A mother and daughter outside their shelter at a UNICEF-supported displacement site outside Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
Vanise and her 2-year-old daughter fled the Carrefour-Feuille neighborhood in Port-au-Prince to escape attacks from armed groups. They have found safety at a displacement site supported by UNICEF. © UNICEF/UNI769137/Noel

For Haiti, natural disasters only one source of pain 

Hurricane Melissa struck Haiti at a time of tremendous suffering due to protracted violence between armed groups in Port-au-Prince and surrounding areas. An estimated 1.4 million people, including 741,000 children, are now displaced by the violence. Food insecurity and child malnutrition are on the rise, and cholera remains a serious threat. 

In October, UNICEF issued a Child Alert warning that the country was at a breaking point, and called for international support and coordinated action to restore access to health, safe water and other essential services "to protect children and reverse the country’s downward spiral."

UNICEF's 2026 appeal for Haiti details plans to deliver support to children and families in need, across all program areas — health, nutrition, water and sanitation, education, child protection —  while continuing to help strengthen preparedness and response to future extreme weather events.

A young girl in Haiti washes hands by the latrine installed as a cholera prevention measure.
Noel-Dina, 11, washes her hands by the latrine her mother dug in their backyard — inspiring a movement that transformed their rural neighborhood in Grand-Goâve, improving local health and hygiene. Before the community-organized effort, most families in Grand-Goâve lived without access to basic sanitation facilities. UNICEF works with local partners in Haiti to support initiatives like this, which are crucial to preventing cholera and other preventable diseases. © UNICEF/2025/Joseph

To fully safeguard the futures of children in Haiti — to ensure they can survive, recover and thrive — humanitarian access must be restored and protected, with armed actors complying with international law. The scale and scope of humanitarian funding must be increased immediately, with donor governments and international partners mobilizing immediate and sufficient resources to fully support critical programs, and there must be sustained political engagement and investment in long-term stabilization and a pathway toward inclusive governance.

Building hope: What UNICEF is calling for in Haiti

Right now, the lives of the most vulnerable children hang in the balance as conflicts and crises jeopardize the care and protection that they deserve. Dependable, uninterrupted and effective foreign aid is critical to the well-being of millions of children. Please contact your members of Congress and urge them to support ongoing U.S. investments in foreign assistance.

 

In Haiti, Naika Bienvil, 21, and her 2-year-old daughter take refuge in a school converted into a shelter as Hurricane Melissa approaches.
TOP PHOTO: In Haiti, Naika Bienvil, 21, and her 2-year-old daughter take refuge at a school converted into a shelter for families displaced by Hurricane Melissa. The storm devastated parts of Haiti's southern regions, communities already weakened by previous disasters. The country remains mired in a polycrisis fueled by armed violence, displacement and lack of services. © UNICEF/UNI893257/Noel

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