UWI Mona students plan sit-out over decision to resume classes less than a week after Hurricane Melissa

Students at the University of the West Indies (UWI), Mona campus, are organizing a peaceful sit-out on Monday to protest the institution’s decision to resume in-person classes in the wake of Hurricane Melissa’s devastation. In an open letter issued on Sunday, a coalition of students demanded a one-week pause in academic activities and the adoption of a hybrid learning model to support those still recovering from the storm’s impact. The letter condemned the university’s decision as “irresponsible” and “tone-deaf,” highlighting that many students remain displaced, lack access to essential utilities, and are emotionally unprepared to return to studies. The protest is framed as an act of solidarity with peers in western Jamaica, a region severely affected by the hurricane, where thousands are still in shelters and critical hospitals remain non-functional. Official reports cited in the letter reveal that 25,000 people are displaced, and at least 28 Jamaicans have lost their lives due to the disaster. The students expressed concern that the university has yet to assess the full extent of the impact on its student body, including those who may be homeless, injured, or deceased. They criticized the administration for reopening the campus “prematurely,” arguing that it disregards the physical and emotional toll of the crisis. Comparisons were drawn with other institutions, such as the University of Technology (UTech), which has indefinitely suspended in-person classes, and UWI’s Western Jamaica Campus, which delayed reopening by a week. The letter also condemned the Mona campus for demanding rent payments for accommodations students were forced to evacuate, labeling it a “class issue” and a “profound abdication of empathy.” The mental strain on students was emphasized, with the letter describing a “frozen mental and emotional state” caused by trauma and uncertainty. The group urged students to exercise their “agency to resist” by abstaining from classes on Monday, concluding with a call to “resist the insensitivity and impracticality of this decision.” The letter was signed by multiple students.