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Up to 2.5m hit by cyclone, but Burma says it can cope



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Published Date: 15 May 2008
THE number of people "severely affected" by the Burma cyclone was put by the United Nations at up to 2.5 million yesterday, as the country's junta continued to limit foreign aid
John Holmes, the UN's humanitarian affairs chief, said all those people urgently needed aid, while the European Union's top aid official warned that the military government's restrictions were increasing the risk of starvation and disease.

But Sa
mak Sundaravej, the Thai prime minister, who urged the junta to ease visa rules for relief workers during a two-hour meeting in Rangoon, said he was told that Burma could "tackle the problem by themselves".

In New York, Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary-general, who has expressed frustration over the response by Burma's reclusive leaders, called a meeting of key donor states and Asian powers to discuss "what kind of concrete measures we can do from now on".

He said: "Even though the Burmese government has shown some sense of flexibility, at this time it is far, far too short. The magnitude of this situation requires much more mobilisation of resources and aid workers."

Nearly two weeks after the cyclone swept through the Irrawaddy delta, killing tens of thousands of people, foreign aid still amounts to little more than a trickle.

Mr Samak told reporters in Bangkok that Burma's leaders had insisted that teams of foreign experts, who have been refused entry, were not needed.

"They are confident of dealing with the problem by themselves. There are no outbreaks of diseases, no starvation, no famine. They don't need experts, but are willing to get aid supplies from every country," he said.

Louis Michel, the top EU aid official, disagreed. He said: "There is a risk of water pollution. There is a risk of starvation because the stores of rice have been destroyed," he said in Bangkok, before flying to Rangoon to seek better access for international aid workers and relief efforts. "We want to convince the authorities of our good faith. We are there for humanitarian reasons."

In Burma, a group of Christian doctors has been treating children in churches, operating below the government's radar. "We have to try to do something," said one Asian doctor, giving out diarrhoea medicine to children in a wooden church north of Rangoon.

Josette Sheeran, executive director of the World Food Programme, said: "A critical issue now is access. WFP has managed to reach more than 28,000 people with food aid so far, with 14 international and 214 national staff in-country."

Asked if the UN might have to consider air drops to get food and other aid to the cyclone victims, Mr Holmes said it was not an ideal form of distributing aid, but might become an option. If barriers to aid workers were not lifted "one might have to look at it".

Burma state television yesterday raised its official toll to 38,491 dead, 1,403 injured and 27,838 missing.





The full article contains 503 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 14 May 2008 10:00 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

KampungHighlander,

Jakarta 15/05/2008 04:10:08
Yes the Junta is coping very well indeed. The Armies warehouses have never been as full as they are now with all the lovely supplies from the International donors. All those high caloric density rations will come in very handy for feeding the Army. The Soldiers particularily like the Biscuits

This should leave them well equiped for their operations against the the Karen and all the other ethnic minorities this year. Thanks International Community, we couldn't do it without your support.

The Junta has also been very succesful at making sure photos of the disaster are not getting out and foreigners are not getting in. The military has put great effort on establishing roadblocks to search everyone for cameras and catch all the sneaky foreign aid workers.

Yes by their standards they are coping very well indeed.

2

Subodai,

China 15/05/2008 06:41:34
Myanmar has had 327.18 tons of aid supplies from Thailand, China, the U.S., Singapore, India, Russia, Italy, Bangladesh, Japan, Laos, Indonesia, Malaysia, Cambodia, Ukraine, Greece, Pakistan, South Korea and Australia.
3

Evia,

15/05/2008 12:21:15
More of the UK taxpayers' money went to handouts for the junta. The poor Burmese people won't see much of the aid.
4

educational snob,

edinburgh 15/05/2008 12:26:41
The situation is so serious that the Burmese people need outside help. One Burmese student in Britain said recently that the junta not only do not care about the civilian deaths - they positively welcome them. In fact, sometimes the junta will send in bulldozers and soldiers to flatten a village and kill its population. In their view, there are simply too many people in Burma, and they want to reduce their number. Like Scrooge, they don't mind if many die, since it will "help to reduce the surplus population".

I wonder why George W. Bush hasn't thought of sending in US troops to protect the Burmese people from an evil regime, like he did in Iraq. Could it be because they don't have any oil!
5

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 15/05/2008 13:09:05
BALDERDASH! UTTER NONSENSE!

The ruling junta is incompetent, replete with graft and corruption and is murdering their own people by deliberate neglect in not allowing various international agencies in to distribute and monitor their donations rather than let the army steal and horde money and food medicines not meant for them ONLY.

Perhaps in the future the leaders of the junta will be caught and tried for crimes against Burma and humanity.

May the junta rot in hell!
6

Subodai,

China 15/05/2008 13:48:35
Nothing from UK at all, taxpayer or no.
7

Pmonkey7,

16/05/2008 09:45:44
#6
'international Development Secretary Douglas Alexander today announced an initial UK contribution of up to £5 million to help with emergency relief efforts following Cyclone Nargis.

The Department for International Development (DFID) also announced it will be sending an emergency field team to help with the wider international relief efforts and support the DFID team already in Burma.

The UK financial contribution is the largest pledge for support from the international community so far. The UK will continue to support the work of the UN and other aid agencies to help deliver the most effective response to the situation. '

Dated 6th of May. But no doubt you are there checking the labels on the boxes??
8

KampungHighlander,

Jakarta 16/05/2008 14:32:01
#2 Scooby Doo

"Myanmar has had 327.18 tons of aid supplies"

Which if divided among the 2.5 million refugees works out to 130 grams per refugee. Even if this was all food, which it is not, if this was all rice it would be 1 cup of rice per person over a ten day period.

If we have another week of dithering by the International Community you are going to see death on a scale that will dwarf even the kinds of famines we saw in the horn of Africa.

The UN must invoke the Duty to Protect. If the criminals in Beijing veto it then the West should act unilaterally.
9

Dáithí,

San Jose 16/05/2008 17:08:57
#4 - ES

>"I wonder why George W. Bush hasn't thought of sending in US troops to protect the Burmese people from an evil regime, like he did in Iraq. Could it be because they don't have any oil!"

Nope. If we were to remove another brutal, repressive regime can you imagine the whining and crying from the self-absorbed Left and the isolationist 'know-nothings' of the Right?

It would reach unprecedented levels. Any adult with children know how annoying whining and crying can be - but it goes away when you just shove something in their mouths.

The Burmese are starving because the 'non-interventionists' have argued that the removal of brutal regimes a thing to be ashamed of.

They are dying for YOUR sins.

10

Dáithí,

San Jose 16/05/2008 17:11:43
KH -

>"The UN must invoke the Duty to Protect. If the criminals in Beijing veto it then the West should act unilaterally."

I agree, but (I'm playing the devils' advocate here) wouldn't taking action without the legality of UN support leave us open to charges of 'violating international law' and 'war criminals'?

 

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