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Scottish businessman donates two boats to Burma as hospital ships



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Published Date: 17 May 2008
A SCOTTISH businessman has donated two cruise boats to act as floating hospitals in the relief effort in Burma.
Paul Strachan, who runs the Pandaw River Cruise Company in the cyclone-hit country, is refitting two 180ft boats as medical aid vessels and loaning them to two charities, Save The Children and Merlin.

His gift comes as more than 130,000 people have been pronounced dead or missing. The hardest-hit area, the Irrawaddy delta, is teeming with up to 2.5 million survivors left homeless by the cyclone.

Burma's military junta yesterday refused to allow a French navy ship with 1,500 tons of food, drugs and medication to use small boats to deliver help.

But Pandaw IV and Pandaw II are allowed unrestricted access because they are entirely staffed with Burmese crew, including 20 doctors and other medical staff from a private hospital in Burma.

Mr Strachan, 45, from Edinburgh, flies out to Rangoon tonight to oversee the mercy mission.

He has hired a local barge and tug to ferry supplies to the river ships and secured private donations of £200,000 to help with fuel costs – each ship uses £500 of diesel every day.

Mr Strachan has had strong links with Burma since he went out as a gap-year student 25 years ago helping to build power stations in the jungle.

Also a Burma historian, he told The Scotsman he wanted to help after hearing of thousands of destitute victims lining roadsides, begging for help in the absence of large-scale government or foreign relief operations.

He said: "I feel this is the tip of the iceberg. All these people living in the wetlands, their stilted houses have been flattened. A monsoon is striking Burma right now and when it floods, and the disease kicks in, that is when the real suffering will start. It's very heart-wrenching but you have got to put your emotions aside and cry later."

He added: "At present, bulk aid cannot be flown in and cleared through the airports fast enough to meet the desperate requirements.

"With over 25 years' experience of working in Burma, I am doubtful if traditional diplomacy, the UN or the intervention of other countries can resolve this impasse.

"My philosophy is to stop fussing over airplanes and just to go shopping. We move fast – no meetings or discussion, just real action."

Pandaw II has now left Mandalay and is on her way to the delta. Pandaw IV is travelling from Henzada, a city in south-west Burma, and is undergoing a refit.

The former bar will become an operating theatre, the dining room a trauma ward and the sundeck a clinic.

The original company, Irrawaddy Flotilla, was established by Scots merchants in 1865. By the 1920s, the company ran over 650 vessels on the rivers of Burma and became the largest privately owned fleet of ships in the world.

But in 1942, the entire fleet was scuppered when the Japanese invaded.

Mr Strachan, whose great-grandfather worked as a ship's captain for the Irrawaddy Flotilla, restored an original Clyde-built steamer called the Pandaw and went on to build four replicas.

Donations can be made by contacting cyclone@pandaw.com.


The full article contains 545 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 16 May 2008 10:01 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

bring them on,

17/05/2008 02:21:16
Well done, Sir
2

\seasider,

Saltcoats 17/05/2008 09:05:18
I echo #2s comment, a Scotsman again leads the way,no doubt this will save many lives. Actions like this help to heap shame on the Burmese Military Government.
3

C U Jimmy,

East Ayrshire 17/05/2008 09:44:17
No 3 A pessimistic optimist?
4

danielrober,

17/05/2008 09:47:11
Well done, sir.
5

bring them on,

17/05/2008 10:34:22
Went to Burma once. Saw the war graves, and had a curry.

Not a place you want to go to on an empty stomach (the war graves).

Placed my "see you jimmy" hat down, and with a tear in my eye, walked away.

6

Sanny,

17/05/2008 12:33:11
Congratulations and thank you to Mr Strachan for this act of much needed humanity in a place so bereft of hope. I doubt if Col Blimp will understand such and action, but then his comments identify him an unthinking idiot.

Sir you bring great credit on yourself and you country. The great pity is that Politicians of all hues cannot follow your lead.
7

Can-Scot,

Pickering 17/05/2008 14:05:15
Well done Mr. Strachan and well said Sanny.

I always find it interesting how the Scots seem to be at the forefront of most endeavors throughout the world.

If the politicians of the world could follow his lead, they would already be out there doing instead of being politicians.



8

bring them on,

17/05/2008 14:09:52
Col, we need you at HQ.

Any chance of you coming in, Sir
9

k4rol,

livingston 17/05/2008 16:02:00
Credit to Mr Strachan.

Well said Sanny.

Col, - http://www.ladbrokes.com/tv-advert/
10

Kilted Hulk,

Lacey NW/USA 17/05/2008 16:03:38
It is things like this that allow me to wear my "USA bicentennial" Kilt with Pride, good show, Scotland always stands aloof.
11

Edith Anne McDonnell,

East Lothian 17/05/2008 19:11:14
Why are you all so negative. Surely anyone that is trying to help should be lauded and not put down!! Well done that man(sounds awfully like the last of the summer wine) I really cannot understand the reason for the negative views of some of your subscribers. After all the the Burma connection with the Strachan family goes back to 1865. Please read your newspaper or go on line and find out!!
12

Billy Boy,

Sherman Oaks Los Angeles 17/05/2008 23:57:04
I think I agree with Col Blinp1V! But to be sure, Mr Strachan really knows Burma AND WANTS TO HELP. for free. I'm sure many of the others do also, but it is difficult for them to understand the mistrust that exists and why!
13

H215,

New York 18/05/2008 22:10:43
Applause!

Someone we can try to emulate in our daily lives.


PS - Bring em on: what is a "see you Jimmy" hat? I imagine it was a sign of honor. Thank you for visiting their graves. Burma is far from home.

 

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