Monday, May 12, 2008
U.S. flies cyclone aid to Myanmar
Above: Cyclone Nargis survivors sit on a jetty that has been turned into a makeshift refugee centre in Myang Mya, in Irrawaddy Division, May 11, 2008. Desperate survivors of Cyclone Nargis headed out of Myanmar's Irrawaddy delta in search of food, water and medicine, but aid workers said on Sunday that thousands will die if emergency supplies don't get through soon.
REUTERS/Stringeer
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The first U.S. military aid flight landed in Myanmar on Monday, but relief supplies continued to just dribble into the reclusive state nine days after a devastating cyclone.
A C-130 military transport plane left Thailand's Vietnam War-era U-Tapao airbase carrying 12,700 kg of water, mosquito nets and blankets. U.S. aid officials said they hope it will the first of many U.S. flights to the army-ruled former Burma.
Greeting the plane at Yangon airport was Navy commander-in-chief Soe Thein, who promised to deliver the supplies "as soon as possible" to the cyclone-hit region, a U.S. embassy official in Yangon said.
"This is Burma's hour of need and the need is urgent," U.S. Agency for International Development administrator Henrietta Fore said before boarding the plane with a Thai-U.S. delegation for the short flight to the cyclone-hit city of Yangon.
Admiral Timothy Keating, head of the U.S. Pacific Command, is also on the plane, to try to meet with Myanmar's generals to urge them to allow a "long, continuous train of flights" that could carry up to 200,000 pounds of relief goods a day.
"We're limited only by the permission from the authorities in Burma," Keating said at the Thai air base.
MINIMAL AID DELIVERIES
Agencies report that deliveries to more than a million increasingly desperate cyclone victims have been minimal.
Medecins Sans Frontieres said on Sunday three cargo planes from Europe carrying medical material and other supplies were scheduled to arrive in Myanmar on Monday.
"More than one week after the disaster, despite the sending of three cargo planes and some positive signals, it has been very difficult to provide highly needed supplies for the heavily affected population in Myanmar," MSF said in a statement.
"In the areas where we have been, we haven't seen any aid being delivered so far, so the amount that has reached people in the areas where we are had been minimal," MSF said
MSF already had a big presence in Myanmar before the cyclone. Aid agencies that did not are having even greater difficulties.
While Myanmar's reclusive military government is accepting aid from the outside world, including the United Nations, it will not let in foreign logistics teams, who were queuing up in Bangkok hoping to get visas from the Myanmar embassy.
The U.N. humanitarian agency said in a new assessment on Sunday that between 1.2 million and 1.9 million were struggling to survive in the aftermath of the storm.
"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 U.N. 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.
"Unless there is a massive and fast infusion of aid, experts and supplies into the hardest-hit areas, there's going to be a tragedy on an unimaginable scale," said Greg Beck of the International Rescue Committee.
In the delta town of Labutta, where 80 percent of homes were destroyed, authorities were providing one cup of rice per family per day, a European Commission aid official told Reuters.
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.
The boat was believed to have hit a submerged tree in the Irrawaddy delta. The accident highlighted the enormous logistical difficulties of delivering aid, with roads washed away and much of the delta turned to swamp.
Myanmar raised the death toll on 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.
HEAVY RAINS PREDICTED
Australia responded to a U.N. appeal for $187 million in aid by dramatically increasing its contribution to $23.4 million.
The U.N. World Food Programme said on Sunday it has begun moving aid to its field headquarters in Labutta using trucks provided by the Myanmar Red Cross and other local partners.
"I think you can say it continues to trickle in," WFP spokesman Marcus Prior said on Monday.
The more than one million worst affected lack food, water, and sanitation, face outbreaks of disease such as cholera, and heavy rains are predicted this week over the delta.
Three U.S. Navy ships are steaming toward Myanmar, and a French warship was expected near Myanmar's waters later this week, carrying 1,500 tonnes of rice that France said it wants to distribute directly to survivors.
Oxfam and World Vision warn that more than 1.5 million people in Myanmar are at risk of death if aid efforts cannot reach cyclone victims
Oxfam requested permission from Myanmar's junta for maximum relief efforts to take place inside the country in order to quickly mobilise aid workers and supplies directly to cyclone victims.
Source: Reuters
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