Breaking News, World News and Taiwan News .英文報紙第一手英文時事、英文新聞


Asia > Other

Tragedy of dead and survivors in Myanmar worsens


By Aung Hla Tun, Reuters
Monday, May 12, 2008


    

YANGON -- Desperate survivors of Cyclone Nargis headed out of Myanmar's Irrawaddy delta in search of

food, water and medicine, but aid workers said Sunday that thousands will die if emergency supplies don't get through soon.

Buddhist temples and schools on the outskirts of the storm's trail of destruction are now makeshift refugee centers.

The U.N. humanitarian agency said in a new assessment that between 1.2 million and 1.9 million were struggling to survive in the aftermath of the storm that struck eight days ago.

"Given the gravity of the situation including the lack of food and water, some partners have reported fears for security, and violent behavior in the most severely afflicted areas," the United Nations Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said.

It said "the number of deaths could range from 63,290 to 101,682, and 220,000 people are reported to be missing". It said "acute environmental issues" posed a threat to life and health.

In a blow to the stumbling relief effort a boat carrying some of the first aid to survivors sank, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said.

Myanmar raised the death toll Sunday to 28,458 dead and 33,416 missing from the storm on the night of May 2 and early on May 3.

Most of the victims were killed by the 12-foot (3.5 meter) wall of sea-water that hit the delta along with the Category 4 cyclone's 190 kph (120 mph) winds.

International agency Oxfam said 1.5 million people are at risk from disease unless a tsunami-like aid effort is mobilized.

"In the Boxing Day tsunami 250,000 people lost their lives in the first few hours, but we did not see an outbreak of disease because the host governments and the world mobilized a massive aid effort to prevent it from happening," Oxfam's Regional Director for East Asia Sarah Ireland said in Bangkok.

"We have to do the same for the people of Myanmar."

The cyclone is one of the worst disasters since the Dec. 26, 2004 tsunami that hit a dozen countries along the Indian Ocean.

Australia responded to a U.N. appeal for US$187 million in aid by dramatically increasing its contribution to US$23.4 million.

The U.N. World Food Program said on Sunday it has begun moving aid to its field headquarters in Labutta using trucks provided by its partners in Myanmar, including the Myanmar Red Cross. The agency said its food shipments had been briefly impounded on Friday at Yangon airport.

France is set to deliver 1,500 tons of rice aid aboard the warship Mistral, which would arrive in Myanmar's waters in the middle of this week, the French foreign ministry said on Sunday.

France wants the aid on the Mistral to be distributed either by the ship's crew, or by the staff of NGOs already on the ground, or by U.N. teams, a foreign ministry source said.

French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner told French newspaper Le Figaro on Saturday that France would not consider entrusting aid to the Myanmar authorities.

Despite alarm bells from the international community about feeble cycle relief effort, the junta kept its focus on a weekend referendum on a new constitution, part of a "roadmap to democracy" culminating in multi-party elections in 2010.

The New Light of Myanmar, the junta's main mouthpiece, said officials were "systematically and accurately" counting the ballots, but did not say when results would be released. The balloting has been delayed by two weeks in the worst-hit areas, including Yangon, the former capital.


      

Tragedy of dead and survivors in Myanmar worsens

Villagers stand near a destroyed ship and repair their house in Pyapon, a town in the Irrawaddy delta of Myanmar Sunday, a week after devastating cyclone Nagris slammed into the low-lying region and Yangon. (AP)

>> More Photos










Comments?
 Respond to this email
 Receive China Post promos
Sitemap | Top Stories | Taiwan | China | Business | Asia | World | Sports | Life | Arts & Leisure | Health | Editorial | Commentary | Travel | Movies | TV Guide
Classifieds | Bookstore | Getting Around | Weather | Guide Post | Student Post | English Courses | Subscribe | Advertise | About Us | Career | Contact Us | Sitemap
Copyright © 1999 – 2008 The China Post. Breaking news from Taiwan, China and the world.
The China Post  Terms of use
External Links : 捷克、瑞士、德國旅遊首選  |  房屋買賣仲介領導品牌  |  雅房,套房出租及免費刊登租屋  |  基金投資穩健成長  |  SUNPLAY防曬乳液